Department of Health
This article is part of the Pharma_Portal project of Spinwatch. |
The Department of Health is part of the UK government.
Contents
Background
From the Department of Health website:
- We have responsibility for standards of health care in the country, including the NHS. We set the strategic framework for adult social care and influence local authority spend on social care. We also set the direction on promoting and protecting the public's health, taking the lead on issues like environmental hazards to health, infectious diseases, health promotion and education, the safety of medicines, and ethical issues.[1]
People
Ministers
- Matthew Hancock - Secretary of State for Health and Social Care since July 2018
- Stephen Barclay - Health Minister since January 2018
- Caroline Dinenage - Care Minister since January 2018
- Jackie Doyle-Price - Mental Health and Inequalities Minister since June 2017
- Steve Brine - Public Health and Primary Care Minister since June 2017
- Lord James O'Shaughnessy - Health Minister (Lords) since December 2016
Former ministers
- Jeremy Hunt - Secretary of State for Health September 2012 to July 2018
- Philip Dunne - minister for health July 2016 to January 2018
- Lord Prior of Brampton - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State.
- Alistair Burt - Minister of State for Community and Social Care
- Jane Ellison - has been Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department of Health in October 2013.
- George Freeman - is a Parliamentary Under Secretary of State.
- Alistair Burt - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State.
- Ben Gummer - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State.
- Rt Hon Alan Johnson MP Secretary of State for Health
- Ben Bradshaw MP Minister of State for Health Services
- Rt Hon Dawn Primarolo MP Minister of State for Public Health
- Phil Hope MP Minister of State for Care Services
- Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham KBE Parliamentary Under Secretary of State
- Ann Keen MP Parliamentary Under Secretary for Health Services
- Norman Lamb - Minister of State at the Department of Health from September 2012 - May 2015
- Daniel Poulter - was a Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department of Health from September 2012 - May 2015
- Frederick Curzon - was Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Quality from May 2010 - May 2015
Special advisers
Former special advisers
- Ed Jones - was Jeremy Hunt’s own personal policy special adviser from May 2013. Jones previously worked at Deloitte and Hanover Communications. [2]
- Sue Beeby - she was known as Hunt’s long-standing special adviser. She has worked in the DoH since 2012. Previous to this Beeby was special adviser to the Secretary of State for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport from May 2010 – September 2012 (2 years 5 months). Beeby also worked for the Conservative Party as press officer from 2006 for three years. She was an account manager at Origin Communications Ltd for two years as well as a marketing manager at Hollington in 2002. From 2000-2002 Sue was an account manager at Zebra Consultancy. [3] Left her role at the DoH in 2015.
- Emily Frith - special adviser to the Cabinet Office from March 2013 to May 2015, but focused on health. Previous roles include policy advisor at Driver Youth Trust, research associate at Prison Reform Trust, external affairs manager at Turning Point, health advisor for Liberal Democrats and research associate at APCO Worldwide. [4] Frith stood for the Liberal Democrats in Hampstead and Kilburn in the 2015 general election.
- Christina Robinson from 2013
- Paul Harrison from 2012
Board Members
Hugh Taylor CB, David Nicholson CBE, Sir Liam Donaldson KB, Julie Baddeley, Derek Myers, Mike Wheeler, David Behan CBE, Richard Douglas CB
Senior Team
Dr. Fiona Adshead, Christine Beasley, Clare Chapman, David Flory, Sian Jarvis, Professor David R Harper CBE, Professor Sally C Davies, Una O'Brien, Surinder Sharma
Chief Scientic Adviser
- Professor Dame Sally Davies
Affiliations
The DH works with and sponsors arm's length bodies (ALBs), which are impartial national organisations working directly with the local NHS, social care services, and other ALBs to regulate the system, improve standards, protect public welfare and support local services.
Regulatory ALBs that often have their own primary powers and on the whole are independent include:
- Care Quality Commission
- Council for Healthcare Regulatory Excellence
- Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
- Human Tissue Authority
- Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
- Monitor
- Postgraduate Medical Education and Training Board
ALBs that focus primarily on establishing national standards and best practice include:
- National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE)
- National Biological Standards Board
- National Institute for Biological Standards and Control
ALBs that focus on safety and the protection of public and patients include:
- Health Potection Agency
- General Social Care Council
- National Patient Safety Agency
- National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse
- National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse
Executive Agencies
NHS Estates Agency | Medicines Control Agency | Medical Devices Agency | NHS Pensions Agency | NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency | Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency[5]
Publications
Contact details, Resources, Notes
Contact
- Address: Customer Service Centre, The Department of Health, Richmond House, 79 Whitehall, London SW1A 2NS
- Phone: 020 7210 4850
- Textphone: 020 7210 5025
- Website:
Resources
See: The Corporate Capture of the NHS
- Tamasin Cave, The privatising cabal at the heart of our NHS Spinwatch, 1 April 2015.
Notes
- ↑ About the Department, Dept of Health website, accessed 11 Aug 2009
- ↑ The Department of Health The House, Parliaments Magazine, Vol.11, 11.2013, accessed 2 October 2014
- ↑ Sue Beeby LinkedIn profile, accessed 2 October 2014
- ↑ Emily Frith LinkedIn profile, accessed 3 October 2014
- ↑ Department of Health Annex B Executive agencies of the Department of Health, Annual Report, 2003, accessed 3 March 2009