Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/ireland

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Department of Health (Northern Ireland)

Northern Irish government department


Northern Irish government department

FieldValue
agency_nameDepartment of Health
nativename;
Ulster-Scots: Männystrie o Poustie
typeDepartment
logoDepartment of Health NI logo.svg
logo_width200px
formedJune 1944 (as Ministry of Health and Local Government)
preceding1Ministry of Home Affairs
jurisdictionNorthern Ireland
headquartersCastle Buildings, Stormont Estate, Belfast, BT4 3SJ
employees731 (September 2011)
budget£4,383.1 million (current) & £200.5 million (capital) for 2011–12
minister1_nameMike Nesbitt
chief1_nameMike Farrar
chief1_positionInterim Permanent Secretary
chief2_nameSharon Gallagher
chief2_positionDeputy Secretary, Head of the Strategic Planning and Performance Group
websitewww.health-ni.gov.uk

Ulster-Scots: Männystrie o Poustie The Department of Health (DoH, , , ) is a devolved Northern Irish government department in the Northern Ireland Executive. The minister with overall responsibility for the department is the Minister of Health.

Until 9 May 2016, the department was previously called the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety ().

Aim

DoH's overall aim and mission is to "improve the health and social well-being of the people of Northern Ireland."

The department launched a new digital strategy in August 2022. It includes the Encompass programme which will create a unified health and care record for the province.

Responsibilities

The Minister, assisted by the department, makes policy and legislation in three broad areas:

  • health and social care – hospitals, family practitioner services and community health and personal social services;
  • public health – promoting and protecting the health and well-being of the population; and
  • public safety – the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (commonly known by its former name, the Northern Ireland Fire Brigade) but not the Police Service of Northern Ireland or HM Coastguard.

Some sensitive health policy issues are reserved to Westminster and are therefore not devolved:

  • human fertilisation and embryology
  • human genetics
  • surrogacy
  • xenotransplantation

In Northern Ireland, abortion law is a criminal justice matter and is devolved.

DoH's main counterparts in the United Kingdom Government are:

  • the Department of Health and Social Care;
  • the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (on fire services)

In the Irish Government, its main counterparts are:

  • the Department of Health;
  • the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage (on fire services).

Health and Social Care organisations

The Health and Social Care system in Northern Ireland consists of the following public bodies:

Northern Ireland-wide

  • Health and Social Care Board
  • Northern Ireland Ambulance Service Health and Social Care Trust
  • Northern Ireland Blood Transfusion Service
  • Business Services Organisation
  • Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service
  • Public Health Agency
  • Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority

Sub-regional health and social care trusts

  • Belfast Health and Social Care Trust
  • Northern Health and Social Care Trust
  • South Eastern Health and Social Care Trust
  • Southern Health and Social Care Trust
  • Western Health and Social Care Trust

History

Health policy in Northern Ireland was originally a responsibility of local government and the Ministry of Home Affairs, which (similarly to the Home Office) retained responsibility for policy areas not delegated to other ministries.

A separate Ministry of Health and Local Government was established in June 1944, as part of the welfare state. In January 1965, that department was divided between the Ministry of Development and the Ministry of Health and Social Services.

The latter ministry was renamed as the Department of Health and Social Services under direct rule, introduced in March 1972. A health and social services ministry was also included in the Northern Ireland Executive briefly established in 1974. The department was responsible for social security policy and its initials DHSS are still used locally to describe benefits and benefit claimants.

Following a referendum on the Belfast Agreement on 23 May 1998 and the granting of royal assent to the Northern Ireland Act 1998 on 19 November 1998, a Northern Ireland Assembly and Northern Ireland Executive were established by the United Kingdom Government under Prime Minister Tony Blair.

In December 1999, the Department of Health and Social Services was renamed as the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety. It gained responsibility for the Northern Ireland Fire Brigade from the Department of the Environment but ceded social security to the Department for Social Development. DHSSPS was therefore one of the six direct rule Northern Ireland departments to continue in existence following devolution, following the Northern Ireland Act 1998 and The Departments (Northern Ireland) Order 1999.

A devolved minister took office on 2 December 1999. Devolution was suspended for four periods, during which the department came under the responsibility of direct rule ministers from the Northern Ireland Office:

  • between 12 February 2000 and 30 May 2000;
  • on 11 August 2001;
  • on 22 September 2001;
  • between 15 October 2002 and 8 May 2007.

Since 8 May 2007, devolution has operated without interruption.

Ministers of Health

MinisterImagePartyTook officeLeft office
Sinn Féin}}"Bairbre de Brún[[File:Bairbre de Brún 2008-10-19 Strasbourg (cropped).jpg60px]]29 November 1999
Office suspended
Sinn Féin}}"Bairbre de Brún[[File:Bairbre de Brún 2008-10-19 Strasbourg (cropped).jpg60px]]30 May 2000
Office suspended
Ulster Unionist Party}}"Michael McGimpsey[[File:Michael McGimpsey UUP.png60px]]14 May 2007
Democratic Unionist Party}}"Edwin Poots[[File:Edwin Poots (cropped).jpg60px]]16 May 2011
Democratic Unionist Party}}"Jim Wells[[File:Jim Wells DUP.jpg60px]]24 September 2014
Democratic Unionist Party}}"Simon Hamilton[[File:SimonHamiltonDUP.jpg60px]]11 May 2015
Office renamed Minister of Health
Sinn Féin}}"Michelle O'Neill[[File:MichelleOneill.jpg60px]]25 May 2016
Office suspended
Ulster Unionist Party}}"Robin Swann[[File:Robin Swann 2020.jpg60px]]11 January 2020
Office suspended
Ulster Unionist Party}}"Robin Swann[[File:Robin Swann 2020.jpg60px]]3 February 2024
Ulster Unionist Party}}"Mike Nesbitt[[File:Mike_Nesbitt.png60px]]29 May 2024

Direct rule ministers

During the periods of suspension, the following ministers of the Northern Ireland Office were responsible for the department:

  • George Howarth (2000)
  • Des Browne (2002–03)
  • Angela Smith (2003–05)
  • Shaun Woodward (2005–06)
  • Paul Goggins (2006–07)

References

References

  1. "Northern Ireland Quarterly Employment Survey Historical Data". Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment.
  2. "Budget 2011–15". Department of Finance and Personnel.
  3. Northern Ireland Budget 2011–15, page 70
  4. (3 August 2022). "Digital strategy will unlock opportunities for health service improvements". Building Better Healthcare.
  5. [http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1998/ukpga_19980047_en_12#sch3 Northern Ireland Act 1998, Schedule 3]
  6. [https://www.theyworkforyou.com/wrans/?id=2009-07-13d.286452.h&s=abortion+speaker%3A10232#g286452.r0 House of Commons, Written answers and statements, 13 July 2009]
  7. "DH: About the Department of Health".
  8. [http://www.dohc.ie/about_us/role/ Department of Health: About the Department] {{webarchive. link. (20 May 2011)
  9. [http://www.environ.ie/en/LocalGovernment/FireandEmergencyServices/ Environment, Community and Local Government: Fire and Emergency Services] {{webarchive. link. (27 December 2010)
  10. Article 2, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Commencement) Order 2000
  11. Article 2, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Restoration of Devolved Government) Order 2000
  12. Article 1, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Suspension of Devolved Government) Order 2001
  13. Article 2, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Restoration of Devolved Government) Order 2001
  14. Article 1, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Suspension of Devolved Government) (No.2) Order 2001
  15. Article 2, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Restoration of Devolved Government) (No.2) Order 2001
  16. Article 1, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Suspension of Devolved Government) Order 2002
  17. Article 2, Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Restoration of Devolved Government) Order 2007
  18. Office suspended for 24 hours on 11 August 2001 and 22 September 2001
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Department of Health (Northern Ireland) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report