Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Ministry of Health (Spain)

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Type
  
Ministry

Province
  
Community of Madrid

Jurisdiction
  
Government of Spain

Phone
  
+34 901 40 01 00

Founded
  
22 December 2011

Ministry of Health (Spain)

Formed
  
July 4th, 1977 as Ministry of Health and Social Security

Preceding agencies
  
Ministry of Health and Consumer Affairs Ministry of Health and Social Policy

Headquarters
  
18, Paseo del Prado Madrid

Agency executive
  
Dolors Montserrat Montserrat, Minister

Website
  
Ministry of Health (in Spanish)

Address
  
28014, Paseo del Prado, 18, 28014 Madrid, Spain

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5:30PMMonday9AM–5:30PMTuesday9AM–5:30PMWednesday9AM–5:30PMThursday9AM–5:30PMFriday9AM–5:30PMSaturday9AM–2PMSunday(Father's Day)Closed

Profiles

The Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality of Spain (Spanish: 'Ministerio de Sanidad, Servicios Sociales e Igualdad) is the ministerial department which takes charge of the health, social and equality policy. The ministry is headquartered in the Paseo del Prado in Madrid, opposite the Prado Museum. The Minister of this department is Mss. Dolors Montserrat.

Contents

Responsibilities

The Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality is a department of the General Administration responsible for:

  • Suggesting and carrying out the Government policy in healthy, planning, medical attention and consumption affairs.
  • Exercising the competencies of the General Administration of the State in order to guarantee the health protection right.
  • Suggesting and carrying out the Government policy in social inclusion and cohesion, family, child protection, attention to disabled persons and equality affairs.
  • Fighting against discrimination and gender violence.
  • Structure

    The Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality is organised in the following superior bodies:

  • The Secretary of State of Social Services and Equality.
  • The Under Secretary of Health, Social Services and Equality.
  • The General Secretary of Health and Consumption.
  • Early period

    The current Ministry was created in the Constituent Legislature in 1977, integrating responsibilities for Health that were hitherto managed by the Ministry of the Interior, and the powers of the Secretariat of Social Security.

    References can be found to the action of Government in public health and welfare in the nineteenth century. A Royal Decree of 9 November 1832 created a Ministry of Public Works and Transport, which included powers over "the field of health with the infirmaries, water and mineral baths" and "charitable institutions". A further Royal Decree of March 10, 1847, created a Department of Health, one of six that made up what is now the Ministry of the Interior. State powers in this area remained with this department until 1933, when the Secretariat of Health and Welfare was transferred to the Ministry of Labour, which then became known as the Ministry of Labour and Health. On November 4, 1936, the Ministry of Health and Welfare was created, with a woman holding a cabinet portfolio for the first time in the history of Spain: Federica Montseny. This ministry was short-lived. When the Prime Minister of the Republic, Juan Negrín, replaced Francisco Largo Caballero the ministry was abolished and absorbed into the Ministry of Labour, once again under a decree of July 5, 1937. After the Spanish Civil War, the responsibility returned to the Ministry of the Interior until 1977.

    Constituent legislature 1977 -

    Royal Decree 1558 of July 4, 1977 established the ministry in its current form, including responsibility for Social Security. Staffing consisted of two secretariats (the Department and Health), a Technical Secretariat and six Directorates: Staff, Management and Finance, Benefits, Social Services Healthcare, Pharmaceutical Management and Public Health and Veterinary Public Health.

    For a short period between February and November 1981, Health was once again merged with Labour. Royal Decree 2823 of 1981, restored it to full ministerial rank but this time without social security which remained with the Labour ministry. With the victory of the People's Party in the elections of 1996, Jose Manuel Romay Beccaria was appointed Minister of Health and Consumer Afffairs, a position he held throughout the Sixth Legislature. Under his direction was created in 1997, the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products (Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios). In the Seventh Legislature Celia Villalobos became minister (2000-2002) and achieved notoriety by her handling mad cow disease. She was succeeded by Ana Pastor Julián (2002-2004). The mad cow crisis precipitated the creation, under Law 11/2001, of the Spanish Food Safety Agency (Agencia Española de Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición, and from 2007: Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición).

    At the beginning of the eighth legislature Elena Salgado became minister (2004-7), but the National Plan on Drugs (Plan Nacional sobre Drogas) was shifted to the Ministry of the Interior (2004). On 6 July 2007, Bernat Soria (2007-9), a scientist by background, succeeded her. In the current (ninth) legislature Soria was re-appointed in 2008, and succeeded by Trinidad Jiménez (2009–10) following a cabinet shuffle. Under Jiménez Social Policy was returned to the health portfolio, including the Institute for the Elderly and Social Services (Instituto de Mayores y Servicios Sociales), previously under Education. Under Leire Pajín (October 2010-December 2011), responsibility for Equality issues were added to her duties, previously under a separate ministry of its own, and the Institute for Women (Instituto de la Mujer), and the Institute for Youth (Instituto de la Juventud). At the beginning of the current tenth legislature Ana Mato became minister. On 24 November 2014, she resigned. On 3 December 2014, Alfonso Alonso succeeded her.

    List of Ministers of Health

    (1) Ministry of Health and Social Security
    (2) Ministry of Work, Health and Social Security
    (3) Ministry of Health and Consumers
    (4) Ministry of Health and Social Policies
    (5) Ministry of Health, Social Policy and Equality
    (6) Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality

    References

    Ministry of Health (Spain) Wikipedia