Minister for Health Minister for Medical Research |
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Style | The Honourable |
Nominator | Premier of New South Wales |
Appointer | Governor of New South Wales |
Inaugural holder |
Fred Flowers (as the Minister for Public Health) Charles Cutler (as the Minister for Science) |
Formation | 22 April 1914 (Public Health) 13 May 1965 (Science) |
Minister for Mental Health Minister for Women Minister for Ageing |
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Style | The Honourable |
Nominator | Premier of New South Wales |
Appointer | Governor of New South Wales |
Inaugural holder |
Cherie Burton (as the Minister Assisting the Minister for Health (Mental Health)) Kerry Chikarovski (as the Minister for the Status of Women) |
Formation | 10 August 2005 (Mental Health) 26 May 1993 (Women) |
The New South Wales Minister for Health is a minister in the New South Wales Government and has responsibilities which includes all hospitals and health services in New South Wales, Australia.
The current Minister for Health and the Minister for Medical Research, since 30 January 2017 is Brad Hazzard. He is assisted in his portfolio by the Minister for Mental Health, currently Tanya Davies since 30 January 2017. Davies is also the Minister for Women and the Minister for Ageing. Together, they administer the portfolio through the Ministry of Health, the Office of Medical Research, and a range of other government agencies.
The role of a government advisor and administrator on medical policy in New South Wales began in 1914, with the appointment of Fred Flowers as the Minister for Public Health. However the medical porfolio had been administered in the government since 1848 when the first "Medical Adviser to the Government" was appointed, with his office reporting to the Colonial Secretary. Following the amalgamation of the Board of Health and the Medical Advisor to the Government a "Department of Public Health" was established in April 1904, headed by the President of the Board of Health. This department was abolished in 1913 and was replaced by the "Office of the Director-General of Public Health" which, like its predecessor, operated under the supervision of the Colonial Secretary. Upon Flowers' appointment as Minister for Public Health, a dedicated government minister supervised the portfolio while remaining the junior minister to the Colonial Secretary. The office was reconstituted as a fully independent "Department of Public Health" headed by the Minister (titled Minister for Health since 1930) in 1938.
The department existed until its abolition in 1972 with the passing of the Health Commission Act 1972 which created the "Health Commission of New South Wales" headed by the minister. In December 1982 the Health Commission was abolished by the Health Administration Act 1982 and replaced by the Department of Health. On 5 October 2011 the Department was renamed the "Ministry of Health".