Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing
| Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing of Wales | |
|---|---|
| Y Gweinidog Iechyd Meddwl a Llesiant (Welsh) | |
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| Welsh Government | |
| Style | Welsh Minister | 
| Status | Minister | 
| Abbreviation | Minister | 
| Member of | Senedd | 
| Reports to | the Senedd, the First Minister of Wales and the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care | 
| Seat | Cardiff | 
| Nominator | First Minister of Wales | 
| Appointer | The Crown | 
| Term length | Five years Subject to elections to the Senedd which take place every five years  | 
| First holder | Eluned Morgan AM | 
| Website | gov | 
The Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing (Welsh: Y Gweinidog Iechyd Meddwl a Llesiant) is a minister of the Welsh Government, accountable to the cabinet secretary for health and social care. Established as a cabinet position in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Wales, it was moved to a junior position in 2021. The current officeholder is Sarah Murphy since July 2024.
Ministers
| Name | Picture | Entered office | Left office | Other offices held | Political party | Government | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minister for Mental Health, Wellbeing and the Welsh Language | ||||||||
| Eluned Morgan |  
 | 
8 October 2020 (during COVID)[1] | 13 May 2021 | Accountable to Minister for Health and Social Services[2] | Labour | First Drakeford government | [1] | |
| Deputy Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing | ||||||||
| Lynne Neagle | 13 May 2021 | 20 March 2024 | Labour | Second Drakeford government | [3] | |||
| Minister for Mental Health and Early Years | ||||||||
| Jayne Bryant |  
 | 
21 March 2024 | 17 July 2024 | Labour | Gething government | [4] | ||
| Sarah Murphy |  
 | 
17 July 2024 | 11 September 2024 | Labour | Gething government | [5] | ||
| Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing | ||||||||
| Sarah Murphy |  
 | 
11 September 2024 | Incumbent | Labour | Eluned Morgan government | [6] | ||
Responsibilities
When the post was created as a cabinet post in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wales, its responsibilities were stated to include at the time to be; mental health services, patient experience, substance misuse, dementia, veterans' health, and the obesity strategy of Wales.[7]
Since becoming a junior post in 2021, the responsibilities of the post are:[3]
- Some public health responsibilities, specifically;
- The response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Wales, screening and vaccination.
 - Services for Health improvement and wellbeing
 
 - Delivery and performance of NHS Wales
 - Escalation procedures
 - Responsibility in managing reports from Healthcare Inspectorate Wales, such as keeping a receipt of, responding to, and managing the direction of their reports.
 - Overseeing the Welsh Government's relationship with Audit Wales in matters relating to the NHS.
 - The training and development of the medical workforce, excluding the higher education years 1-5 of Doctors
 - Health and social care research and development
 - Digital health and health innovation
 - Mental health services
 - Suicide prevention
 - Dementia
 - Autism
 - Gambling problem-related health impacts
 - Substance misuse
 - Health of the armed forces and veterans
 - Strategy for Obesity
 - Food Standards Agency in Wales, including food safety
 - Genetically modified food (but not genetically modified crops)
 - Experience of patients, their involvement, and the citizens' voices
 - Safeguarding
 - Services for Adoption and Foster care
 - Advocacy services for children and young people's, such as managing complains, representations, as well as advocacy, under the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014
 - Sharing information under the Children Act 2004
 - Cafcass Cymru
 - Overseeing and deciding policy regarding social service provision of activities by the local authorities in Wales, including issuing statutory guidance
 - Overseeing Social Care Wales
 - Regulating domiciliary, residential, adult placements, foster care, under 8's care provision and private healthcare
 - Inspecting and reporting the provision of social services by the local authorities in Wales, through the Care Inspectorate Wales, including jointly reviewing social services and responding to any reports
 - The rights and entitlements of children and young people, including utilising the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
 - Early years, childcare and play, including the "childcare offer" and its workforce
 - Early childhood education and care
 - Flying Start for children aged 0–3 years
 - Policies for Families First and play
 
The post-holder launched the "National Framework for Social Prescribing" in December 2023, aiming for the consistent delivery of social prescribing.[8][9] The post-holder also announced in 2023, funding arrangements for Trading Standards Wales, concerning illegal electronic cigarettes,[10] and online therapy services overseen by Powys Teaching Health Board in 2022.[11]
See also
References
- ^ a b "First Minister strengthens ministerial health team | GOV.WALES". www.gov.wales. 8 October 2020. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
 - ^ "Welsh Government introduces post of minister for mental health and wellbeing". Care Appointments. 12 October 2020. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
 - ^ a b "Lynne Neagle MS: Deputy Minister for Mental Health and Wellbeing | GOV.WALES". www.gov.wales. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 - ^ "Wales' new First Minister Vaughan Gething announces his cabinet". ITV News. 21 March 2024.
 - ^ "Vaughan Gething reshuffles Welsh Labour top team after resignations". The Independent. 17 July 2024. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
 - ^ "Welsh government reshuffle: Miles back as minister after ousting Gething". BBC News. 11 September 2024. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
 - ^ "Mental health minister role for Senedd's Eluned". Western Telegraph. 12 October 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 - ^ "Social prescribing growing in Wales". University of South Wales. 11 December 2023.
 - ^ Dave (11 December 2023). "Launching National Framework for Social Prescribing". WCVA. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 - ^ "Welsh Government funding to crack down on illegal vaping market". GVS. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 - ^ "More than £7m funding for mental health service". Western Telegraph. 7 March 2022. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 
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