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Ministry of Health (Chile): Difference between revisions


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Ministry of Health
MINSAL.png
Minsal.jpg
Ministry headquarters
Formed 1959
Preceding agencies
  • • Ministry of Hygiene, Social Assistance and Welfare (1924-1927)
  • • Ministry of Social Welfare (1927-1931)
  • • Ministry of Public Health (1932-1935)
  • • Ministry of Public Health, Social Assistance and Welfare (1936-1953)
  • • Ministry of Public Health and Social Welfare (1953-1958)
Type Ministry
Jurisdiction Government of Chile
Headquarters Enrique Mac Iver 541
Santiago
Employees 128,668 (2017)[1]
Ministers responsible
  • Ximena Aguilera, Minister of Health
  • Cristóbal Cuadrado, Undersecretary of Public Health
  • Fernando Araos, Undersecretary of Assistance Networks
Child agency
Website Official website (in Spanish)

The Ministry of Health of Chile (Spanish: Ministerio de Salud de Chile), also known as MINSAL, is the cabinet-level administrative office in charge of planning, directing, coordinating, executing, controlling and informing the public health policies formulated by the President of Chile. Notably, all employees pay 7% of their monthly income to FONASA, the funding branch of the Chilean Ministry of Health.

The current Minister of Health is Ximena Aguilera.[2] The minister has two adjuncts: the Undersecretary of Public Health (Spanish: Subsecretaria de Salud Pública) and the Undersecretary of Assistance Networks (Spanish: Subsecretaria de Redes Asistenciales).

History[edit]

a FONASA sign. FONASA is the funding branch of the Ministry of Health.

In 1808, the Committee of Vaccines (Spanish: Junta de Vacunas) was founded, and then in 1832 the Board of Directors of Hospitals (Spanish: Junta Directiva de Hospitales) began operations. Both organizations were precursors of what would become the modern institutions of public health. In 1907, a division charged with the administration of public hygiene was created under the Ministry of the Interior (Spanish: Ministerio del Interior). Then on 14 October 1924, this division was made into the cabinet-level Ministry of Hygiene, Social Assistance and Welfare (Spanish: Ministerio de Higiene, Asistencia y Previsión Social), with the same function (Decree No. 44, 1924). In 1927 all the ministries underwent an important restructuring; with these change it became the Ministry of Social Welfare (Spanish: Ministerio de Bienestar Social), and was charged with, as well as the coordination of public health policies, the investigation of the application of laws relating to society, public welfare, and social security.[citation needed]

In 1932, it was once again renamed, becoming the Ministry of Public Health (Spanish: Ministerio de Salubridad Pública), then the Ministry of Public Health, Social Assistance and Welfare (Spanish: Ministerio de Salubridad Pública, Asistencia y Previsión Social) in 1936, and later the Ministry of Public Health and Social Welfare (Spanish: Ministerio de Salud Pública y Previsión Social) in 1953.[citation needed]

In 1959, the ministry was divided into the Ministry of Public Health (Spanish: Ministerio de Salud Pública), the modern form of the ministry, and, assuming the functions regulating the welfare of Chileans, the Ministry of Work and Social Welfare (Spanish: Ministerio del Trabajo y Previsión Social).

Finally, from 1973 to 1979, the internal structure of the ministry, now simply the Ministry of Health, was reorganized, creating services such as the National Health Fund (Spanish: Fondo Nacional de Salud), or FONASA.[citation needed]

Organization[edit]

Currently under the Ministry are the following public institutions:

Titulars[edit]

Ministers of Hygiene, Social Assistance and Welfare[edit]

Ministers of Social Welfare[edit]

Ministers of Public Health (First Creation)[edit]

Ministers of Public Health, Social Assistance and Welfare[edit]

Ministers of Public Health and Social Welfare[edit]

Ministers of Public Health (Second Creation)[edit]

References[edit]

Sources[edit]

  • República de Chile (1942). “VI. Poder Ejecutivo – Nómina de Gobernantes, Presidentes y Ministros desde la Independencia.”. Manual del Senado. 1810-1942 (PDF) (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Imprenta Universitaria. (in Spanish)
  • Valencia Avaria, Luis (1986). Anales de la República: textos constitucionales de Chile y registro de los ciudadanos que han integrado los poderes ejecutivo y legislativo desde 1810 (in Spanish) (2ª edición ed.). Santiago de Chile: Editorial Andrés Bello. (in Spanish)

External links[edit]



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