Secretary of State for Health and Social Care

The secretary of state for health and social care, also referred to as the health secretary, is a secretary of state in the Government of the United Kingdom, responsible for the work of the Department of Health and Social Care.[3] The incumbent is a member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom.

United Kingdom
Secretary of State
for Health and Social Care
Incumbent
Victoria Atkins
since 13 November 2023
Department of Health and Social Care
StyleHealth Secretary
(informal)
The Right Honourable
(within the UK and Commonwealth)
TypeMinister of the Crown
StatusSecretary of State
Member of
Reports toThe Prime Minister
SeatWestminster
NominatorThe Prime Minister
AppointerThe Monarch
(on the advice of the Prime Minister)
Term lengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
Formation
  • 14 October 1854:
    (as President of the Board of Health)
  • 8 January 2018:
    (as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care)
First holderBenjamin Hall
(as President of the Board of Health)
Salary£159,038 per annum (2022)[1]
(including £86,584 MP salary)[2]
Websitewww.gov.uk/government/ministers/secretary-of-state-for-health-and-social-care Edit this at Wikidata

The position can trace its roots back to the nineteenth century, and has been a secretary of state position since 1968. For 30 years, from 1988 to 2018, the position was titled Secretary of State for Health, before Prime Minister Theresa May added "and Social Care" to the designation in the 2018 British cabinet reshuffle.[4]

The office holder works alongside the other health and social care ministers. The corresponding shadow minister is the shadow secretary of state for health and social care, and the secretary of state is also scrutinised by the Health and Social Care Select Committee.[5]

The position is currently held by Victoria Atkins since 13 November 2023.

Responsibilities edit

Corresponding to what is generally known as a health minister in many other countries, the health secretary's remit includes the following:

  • Oversight of England's National Health Service, including:
    • Delivery of care
    • Performance
    • Fiscal consolidation
    • Financial management[6]
  • Matters concerning England's social care policy (although responsibility is shared with the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in respect of adult social care, and the Department for Education in respect of children's social care).
  • Matters concerning England's national public health
  • Relations with international health partnerships (WHO)

History edit

The first Boards of Health were created by Orders in Council dated 21 June, 14 November and 21 November 1831. In 1848, a General Board of Health was created with lay members as its leadership[7] and the first commissioner of woods and forests as its president. In 1854, this board was reconstituted and the president appointed separately. However, the board was abolished in 1858 and its function of overseeing the local boards was transferred to a new Local Government Act Office within the Home Office. From 1871, that function was transferred to the new Local Government Board.[citation needed]

The Ministry of Health was created in by the Ministry of Health Act 1919 as a reconstruction of the Local Government Board. Local government functions were eventually transferred to the minister of housing and local government, leaving the Health Ministry in charge of Health proper.

From 1968, it was amalgamated with the Ministry of Social Security under the secretary of state for social services, until a de-merger of the Department of Health and Social Security on 25 July 1988.

Since devolution in 1999, the position holder's responsibility for the NHS is mainly restricted to the health service in England, with the holder's counterparts in Scotland and Wales responsible for the NHS in Scotland and Wales. Prior to devolution, the secretaries of state for Scotland and Wales had those respective responsibilities, but the Department of Health had a larger role than now in the co-ordination of health policy across Great Britain. Health services in Northern Ireland have always had separate arrangements from the rest of the UK, and are currently the responsibility of the health minister in the Northern Ireland Executive.

A small number of health issues remain reserved matters, that is, they are not devolved.

According to Jeremy Hunt the department receives more letters than any other government department and there are 50 officials in the correspondence unit.[8]

List of ministers edit

Colour key (for political parties):
   Whig   Conservative   Radical   Peelite   Liberal   Labour   Unionist   National Labour   National Liberal

President of the Board of Health (1848-1858) edit

President of the BoardTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
As First Commissioner of Woods and ForestsLord John Russell
The Earl of Carlisle184817 April 1849Whig
Lord Seymour
MP for Totnes
17 April 18491 August 1851Whig
As First Commissioner of Works
Lord Seymour
MP for Totnes
1 August 185121 February 1852Whig
Lord John Manners
MP for Colchester
4 March 185217 December 1852ConservativeThe Earl of Derby
William Molesworth
MP for Southwark
5 January 185314 October 1854RadicalThe Earl of Aberdeen
(Coalition)
President of the Board of Health
Benjamin Hall
MP for Marylebone
14 October 185413 August 1855Whig
The Viscount Palmerston
William Cowper
MP for Hertford
13 August 18559 February 1857Whig
William Monsell
MP for County Limerick
9 February 185724 September 1857Whig
William Cowper
MP for Hertford
24 September 185721 February 1858Whig
Charles Adderley
MP for Staffordshire Northern
8 March 18581 September 1858ConservativeThe Earl of Derby
Board of Health abolished in 1858; responsibilities transferred to
the Privy Council (1858–1871), then the Local Government Board (1871–1919).

Minister of Health (1919–1968) edit

MinisterTerm of officePolitical partyMinistry
Christopher Addison
MP for Shoreditch
24 June 19191 April 1921LiberalLloyd George II
Alfred Mond
MP for Swansea West
1 April 192119 October 1922Liberal
Arthur Griffith-Boscawen
MP for Taunton
24 October 19227 March 1923
(Lost seat 1922)
ConservativeLaw
Neville Chamberlain
MP for Birmingham Ladywood
7 March 192327 August 1923Conservative
Baldwin I
William Joynson-Hicks
MP for Twickenham
27 August 192322 January 1924Conservative
John Wheatley
MP for Glasgow Shettleston
22 January 19243 November 1924LabourMacDonald I
Neville Chamberlain
MP for Birmingham Ladywood
then Birmingham Edgbaston
6 November 19244 June 1929ConservativeBaldwin II
Arthur Greenwood
MP for Nelson and Colne
7 June 192924 August 1931LabourMacdonald II
Neville Chamberlain
MP for Birmingham Edgbaston
25 August 19315 November 1931ConservativeNational I
Hilton Young
MP for Sevenoaks
5 November 19317 June 1935ConservativeNational II
Kingsley Wood
MP for Woolwich West
7 June 193516 May 1938ConservativeNational III
National IV
Walter Elliot
MP for Glasgow Kelvingrove
16 May 193813 May 1940Unionist
Chamberlain War
Malcolm MacDonald
MP for Ross and Cromarty
13 May 19408 February 1941National LabourChurchill War
Ernest Brown
MP for Leith
8 February 194111 November 1943National Liberal
Henry Willink
MP for Croydon North
11 November 194326 July 1945Conservative
Churchill Caretaker
Aneurin Bevan
MP for Ebbw Vale
3 August 194517 January 1951LabourAttlee I
Attlee II
Hilary Marquand
MP for Middlesbrough East
17 January 195126 October 1951Labour
Harry Crookshank
MP for Gainsborough
30 October 19517 May 1952ConservativeChurchill III
Iain Macleod
MP for Enfield West
7 May 195220 December 1955Conservative
Eden
Robin Turton
MP for Thirsk and Malton
20 December 195516 January 1957Conservative
Dennis Vosper
MP for Runcorn
16 January 195717 September 1957ConservativeMacmillan I
Derek Walker-Smith
MP for East Hertfordshire
17 September 195727 July 1960Conservative
Macmillan II
Enoch Powell
MP for Wolverhampton South West
27 July 196020 October 1963Conservative
Anthony Barber
MP for Doncaster then Altrincham and Sale
20 October 196316 October 1964ConservativeDouglas-Home
Kenneth Robinson
MP for St. Pancras North
18 October 19641 November 1968LabourWilson I
Post merged with Ministry for Social Security in 1968.

Secretary of State for Health and Social Services (1968–1988) edit

Secretary of StateTerm of officePolitical partyMinistry
Richard Crossman
MP for Coventry East
1 November 196819 June 1970LabourWilson II
Keith Joseph
MP for Leeds North East
20 June 19704 March 1974ConservativeHeath
Barbara Castle
MP for Blackburn
5 March 19748 April 1976LabourWilson III
David Ennals
MP for Norwich North
8 April 19764 May 1979LabourCallaghan
Patrick Jenkin
MP for Wanstead and Woodford
5 May 197914 September 1981ConservativeThatcher I
Norman Fowler
MP for Sutton Coldfield
14 September 198113 June 1987Conservative
Thatcher II
John Moore
MP for Croydon Central
13 June 198725 July 1988ConservativeThatcher III
Post split into Secretary of State for Social Security and Secretary of State for Health in 1988.

Secretary of State for Health (1988–2018) edit

Secretary of StateTerm of officePolitical partyMinistry
Kenneth Clarke
MP for Rushcliffe
25 July 19882 November 1990ConservativeThatcher III
William Waldegrave
MP for Bristol West
2 November 199010 April 1992Conservative
Major I
Virginia Bottomley
MP for South West Surrey
10 April 19925 July 1995ConservativeMajor II
Stephen Dorrell
MP for Loughborough then Charnwood
5 July 19952 May 1997Conservative
Frank Dobson
MP for Holborn and St. Pancras
3 May 199711 October 1999LabourBlair I
Alan Milburn
MP for Darlington
11 October 199913 June 2003Labour
Blair II
John Reid
MP for Hamilton North and Bellshill then Airdrie and Shotts
13 June 20036 May 2005Labour
Patricia Hewitt
MP for Leicester West
6 May 200528 June 2007LabourBlair III
Alan Johnson
MP for Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle
28 June 20075 June 2009LabourBrown
Andy Burnham
MP for Leigh
5 June 200911 May 2010Labour
Andrew Lansley
MP for South Cambridgeshire
11 May 20104 September 2012ConservativeCameron–Clegg
(Con.L.D.)
Jeremy Hunt
MP for South West Surrey
4 September 20128 January 2018Conservative
Cameron II
May I
May II

Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (2018–present) edit

Secretary of StateTerm of officePolitical partyMinistry
Jeremy Hunt
MP for South West Surrey
8 January 20189 July 2018ConservativeMay II
Matt Hancock
MP for West Suffolk
9 July 201826 June 2021Conservative
Johnson I
Johnson II
Sajid Javid
MP for Bromsgrove
26 June 20215 July 2022Conservative
Steve Barclay
MP for North East Cambridgeshire
5 July 20226 September 2022Conservative
Thérèse Coffey
MP for Suffolk Coastal
6 September 202225 October 2022ConservativeTruss
Steve Barclay
MP for North East Cambridgeshire
25 October 202213 November 2023ConservativeSunak
Victoria Atkins
MP for Louth and Horncastle
13 November 2023IncumbentConservative

Timeline edit

Victoria AtkinsThérèse CoffeySteve BarclaySajid JavidMatt HancockJeremy HuntAndrew LansleyAndy BurnhamAlan JohnsonPatricia HewittJohn Reid, Baron Reid of CardowanAlan MilburnFrank DobsonStephen DorrellVirginia BottomleyWilliam WalegraveKenneth ClarkeJohn Moore, Baron Moore of Lower MarshNorman FowlerPatrick JenkinDavid EnnalsBarbara CastleKeith JosephRichard CrossmanKenneth RobinsonAnthony BarberEnoch PowellDerek Walker-SmithDennis VosperRobin TurtonIain MacleodHarry CrookshankHilary MarquandAneurin BevanHenry WillinkErnest Brown (British politician)Malcom MacDonaldWalter Elliot (Scottish politician)Kingsley WoodHilton YoungArthur GreenwoodJohn WheatleyWilliam Joynson-HicksNeville ChamberlainArthur Griffith-BoscawenAlfred MondChristopher Addison

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Salaries of Members of His Majesty's Government – Financial Year 2022–23" (PDF). 15 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Pay and expenses for MPs". parliament.uk. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Secretary of State for Health and Social Care". gov.uk. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  4. ^ "Jeremy Hunt keeps Heath Secretary with added social care brief despite overseeing NHS 'winter crisis'". The Independent. 8 January 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2021. Jeremy Hunt has kept his job as Health Secretary, despite overseeing what is widely viewed as a winter crisis in the NHS. However, Theresa May has added social care to his responsibilities, to signal her determination to sort out one of the biggest issues facing the country.
  5. ^ "Health Secretary answers questions on the Government's handling of the pandemic". UK PARLIAMENT. 4 June 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2022. Matt Hancock MP, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, answers questions from MPs on the Government's handling of the covid-19 pandemic.
  6. ^ "Secretary of State for Health and Social Care - GOV.UK". gov.uk.
  7. ^ "4 Dec 1848, 5 - The Observer at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  8. ^ Hunt, Jeremy (2022). Zero. London: Swift Press. p. 14. ISBN 9781800751224.

External links edit