Catalogue description Department of Health: European Atomic Energy Community: Registered Files

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Date range

Details of JA 422
Reference: JA 422
Title: Department of Health: European Atomic Energy Community: Registered Files
Description:

This series contains files relating to radiation policy, including Euratom (European Atomic Energy Community) and other international organisations

Date: 1984-2006
Related material:

Material on Euratom directives can also be found in:

MH 149

MH 164

Subseries within MH 160

Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Former reference in its original department: RPI file series
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

Department of Health, 1988-

Department of Health and Social Security, 1968-1988

Physical description: 44 file(s)
Access conditions: Open
Immediate source of acquisition:

From 2015 Department of Health

Selection and destruction information: Files relating to the implementation of directives have been selected.
Accruals: Series is accruing.
Administrative / biographical background:

The Department of Health was formally created in 1988 through The Transfer of Functions (Health and Social Security) Order. Like many others, the department with responsibility for the nation's health has had different names and included other functions over time. In the 19th century, several bodies were formed for specific consultative duties and dissolved when they were no longer required. There were two incarnations of the Board of Health (in 1805 and 1831) and a General Board of Health (1854 to 1858) that reported directly into the Privy Council. Responsibility for health issues was also at times, and in part, vested in local health boards and, with the emergence of modern local government, with the Local Government Act Office, part of the Home Office. In the early part of the 20th century, medical assistance was provided through National Health Insurance Commissions. The first body, which could be called a department of government was the Ministry of Health, created through the Ministry of Health Act 1919, consolidating under a single authority the medical and public health functions of central government. The co-ordination of local medical services was expanded in connection with emergency and wartime services, from 1935 to 1945, and these developments culminated in the establishment of the NHS in 1948. In 1968, the Ministry of Health was dissolved and its functions transferred (along with those of the similarly dissolved Ministry of Social Security) to the newly created Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS). Twenty years later, these functions were split back into two government departments, forming the Department of Social Security (DSS) and the Department of Health (DH) After the 2018 British cabinet reshuffle, the department was renamed the Department of Health and Social Care.

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