Loading AI tools
Government ministry of the Republic of Turkey From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ministry of Health (Turkish: Sağlık Bakanlığı) is the ministry of the Government of Turkey responsible for proposing and executing the government policy on health, planning and providing healthcare and protecting consumers. Likewise, it is responsible for proposing and executing the government policy on social cohesion and inclusion, family, protection of minors, youth and of care for dependent or disabled persons. The Ministry is headquartered in the Bakanlıklar in Ankara.
Sağlık Bakanlığı | |
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1920 |
Jurisdiction | Government of Turkey |
Headquarters | Ankara, Turkey |
Employees | 1.142.469[1] |
Minister responsible |
|
Website | www |
The Ministry of Health is headed by the Minister of Health, who is appointed by the President of Turkey at request of the Turkish Parliament. The current minister is Fahrettin Koca, serving since 10 July 2018.
Continuity and organization of healthcare were a key focus in the Seljuk-Ottoman medical tradition. Following the foundation of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey, the Ministry of Health was established on 3 May 1920. The main goal of this initial period was to heal the wounds of the war and to build the legislation rather than developing a regular registration system.
After the Republic was proclaimed, Dr. Refik Saydam held the ministerial office until 1937. Saydam contributed to the design and development of healthcare services in Turkey. In 1923, healthcare services were delivered at governmental and municipal facilities. The country had 86 hospitals and 6.437 patient beds back then. During this period the Law on Practice of Medicine and Medical Sciences (1928) and the Law on Public Hygiene (1930) were adopted. These two and similar other laws are still in effect. The health policies during this era had four main pillars:
Under these pillars, healthcare services were based on the "single-purpose care in broad geography - vertical organization" model. Legislation was developed to promote preventive care and local administrations were encouraged to open hospitals. The objective was to have a government physician in every district. Starting from densely populated settlements, diagnostic and treatment offices were opened in 150 district centers in 1924 and 20 more in 1936. The salaries of physicians providing preventive care were raised and they were forbidden to engage in private practice.[2]
The "First 10-Year National Health Plan", the first written health plan of Turkey, was adopted at the Supreme Health Council in 1946. The plan was announced by the Minister of Health Dr. Behçet Uz in 1946. It took nearly one and a half year for the National Health Plan to become a draft bill. It was approved by the Council of Ministers and at four different Parliamentary committees. However, the bill was not enacted because of the change of government. Although the National Health Plan and the National Health Program were not entirely implemented in the form of a law, the two documents deeply influenced the healthcare organization around the country.
The basic approach was to centralize inpatient facilities that had been controlled by local administrations. The Plan aimed to expand healthcare to rural areas by establishing a 10-bed health center for every 40 villages. The care design of these facilities consisted of delivering preventive and curative services together. By design, each facility included two physicians, one health officer, one midwife, one visiting nurse and a village midwife and a health officer for every 10 villages. The number of the health centers was 8 in 1945, 181 in 1955 and 283 in 1960.
The Maternal and Child Health Section was established at the Ministry of Health in 1952. A Maternal and Child Health Development Center was established in Ankara in 1953 with assistance from UNICEF and World Health Organization. In this period, pro-natalist policies were adopted due to high rate of child and infection related mortalities. Therefore, Turkey continued to increase the number of health centers, maternity facilities and infection prevention centers and strengthened its corps of health professionals.
In 1954, the Minister of Health announced the "National Health Program and Health Bank Studies". Following on the First 10-Year National Health Plan, the Program provided the building blocks of healthcare planning and organization in Turkey. The National Health Plan split the country into seven health regions (i.e. Ankara, Balıkesir, Erzurum, Diyarbakır, İzmir, Samsun and Seyhan). On the other hand, the National Health Program divided the country into 16 health regions.
After İstanbul and Ankara universities, the medical faculty of Ege University started admitting students in 1955 in order to strengthen the health workforce. The number of physicians, nurses and midwives increased more than 100% in 10 years.[2]
Both the National Health Plan and the National Health Program were aimed to provide health insurance to citizens for a fee, cover the treatment costs of the uninsured poor from a special administration budget, set up a health bank to finance healthcare costs, control production of drugs, serums and vaccines and create industries to produce milk and baby formulas. For this purpose, the Biological Control Laboratory and a vaccination station were established at Refik Saydam Public Hygiene Center in 1947. The production of intradermal BCG started in the same year. The production of pertussis vaccines started in 1948. The Workers' Insurance Administration (Social Insurance Institution) was created in 1946. Health facilities and hospitals for insured workers were opened after 1952. In this period, legislation was developed for civil society organizations and various medical professions such as:
Socialization in health was launched in 1963 and expanded to the whole country in 1983. Health posts, health centers and district and provincial hospitals were opened countrywide to provide extensive, continuous, integrated and staged healthcare. The Population Planning Law adopted in 1965 shifted the policy of the country from a pro-natalist to an anti-natalist policy. The Ministry of Health was authorized to establish a dedicated organization, obtain or manufacture or outsource provision of contraceptive drugs, provide citizens in need with such drugs for free or on a rate cheaper than the production cost or take measures to that effect.
In 1990, the State Planning Organization prepared the "Healthcare Sector Master Planning Study" together with the Ministry of Health. This basic plan on the healthcare sector marked the beginning of a process of addressing health reforms. The preparatory theoretical efforts for the health reforms gained momentum with the First and Second National Health Congress held in 1992 and 1993. This introduced the green card for poor citizens without social security. This allowed low-income people to be covered by health insurance although the care package was limited. In 1993, the Ministry of Health developed the "National Health Policy" which consisted of five main components including support, environmental health, healthcare delivery and goals for healthy Turkey.
The main components of the Health Reform efforts in 1990s were as follows:
This was a period when major theoretical work was done but without noteworthy chances for implementation.[2]
The Government of Turkey started the Health Transformation Program (HTP) in 2003.[3] To address the challenges, the World Bank has supported Turkey's Health Transformation Program since 2003 with two Adaptable Program Loans (APLs). The Bank also provided technical guidance, and shared the experiences of other countries.[4] The Plan included the following targets under the title "Health for All":
The Program was developed and launched in early 2003 based on the earlier experiences including socialization and subsequent health reform efforts. Complaints about long waiting lists decreased. Patients stranded in hospitals for failing to pay the bills became a thing of the past as the main concern was the provision of social insurance and universal health care. After addressing the emergency transportation issues, demands were now focused on qualified intensive care unit beds in sufficient numbers.
The 60th government of Turkey added three more points to HTP which are the promotion of healthy lifestyle, mobilizing stakeholders and multi-dimensional health responsibility for intersectoral collaboration and deliver cross-border health services which will for furthering Turkey's position internationally.[5]
In 2003, only 39.5% of the population was satisfied with health services, whereas by 2011 this proportion had increased to 75.9%. In the same period, the overall health workforce increased by 36 percent, growing from 295,000 to 460,000.[4]
The following units are linked to the Ministry of Health:
The first Turkish Minister of Health was Dr. Adnan Adıvar. The current minister is Dr. Fahrettin Koca, serving since 10 July 2018.
Name of Minister | Period of Service |
---|---|
Dr. Adnan Adıvar | 1920 - 1921 |
Dr. Refik Saydam | 1921 - 1921 |
Dr. Rıza Nur | 1921 - 1923 |
Dr. Refik Saydam | 1923 - 1924 |
Dr. Mazhar Germen | 1924 - 1925 |
Dr. Refik Saydam | 1925 - 1937 |
Dr. Ahmet Hulusi Alataş | 1937 - 1945 |
Dr. Sadi Konuk | 1945 - 1946 |
Dr. Behçet Uz | 1946 - 1948 |
Dr. Kemali Bayazıt | 1948 - 1950 |
Prof. Dr. Nihat Reşat Belger | 1950 - 1950 |
Dr. Ekrem Hayri Üstündağ | 1950 - 1954 |
Dr. Behçet Uz | 1954 - 1955 |
Nafiz Körez | 1955 - 1957 |
Dr. Lütfi Kırdar | 1957 - 1960 |
Prof. Dr. Nusret Karasu | 1960 - 1960 |
Prof. Dr. Nusret Hasan Fişek | 1960 - 1960 |
Prof. Dr. Salih Ragıp Üner | 1960 - 1961 |
Dr. Süleyman Suat Seren | 1961 - 1962 |
Dr. Yusuf Azizoğlu | 1962 - 1963 |
Prof. Dr. Fahrettin Kerim Gökay | 1963 - 1963 |
Dr. Kemal Demir | 1963 - 1965 |
Dr. Faruk Sükan | 1965 - 1965 |
Dr. Edip Somunoğlu | 1965 - 1967 |
Dr. Vedat Ali Özkan | 1967 - 1971 |
Prof. Dr. Türkan Akyol | 1971 - 1971 |
Dr. Cevdet Aykan | 1971 - 1972 |
Dr. Kemal Demir | 1972 - 1973 |
Dr. Vefa Tanır | 1973 - 1974 |
Dr. Selahattin Cizrelioğlu | 1974 - 1974 |
Dr. Kemal Demir | 1974 - 1977 |
Dr. Vefa Tanır | 1977 - 1977 |
Prof. Dr. Celal Ertuğ | 1977 - 1977 |
Cengiz Gökçek | 1977 - 1978 |
Dr. Mete Tan | 1978 - 1979 |
Dr. Münif İslamoğlu | 1979 - 1980 |
Prof. Dr. Necmi Ayanoğlu | 1980 - 1981 |
Prof. Dr. Kaya Kılıçturgay | 1981 - 1983 |
Mehmet Aydın | 1983 - 1986 |
Dr. Mustafa Kalemli | 1986 - 1987 |
Bülent Akarcalı | 1987 - 1988 |
Cemil Çiçek | 1988 - 1988 |
Nihat Kitapçı | 1988 - 1989 |
Halil Şıvgın | 1989 - 1991 |
Dr. Yaşar Eryılmaz | 1991 - 1991 |
Dr. Yıldırım Aktuna | 1991 - 1993 |
Rıfat Serdaroğlu | 1993 - 1993 |
Kazım Dinç | 1993 - 1994 |
Dr. Doğan Baran | 1994 - 1996 |
Dr. Yıldırım Aktuna | 1996 - 1997 |
Dr. İsmail Karakuyu | 1997 - 1997 |
Dr. Halil İbrahim Özsoy | 1997 - 1999 |
Dr. Mustafa Güven Karahan | 1999 - 1999 |
Dr. Osman Durmuş | 1999 - 2002 |
Prof. Dr. Recep Akdağ | 2002 - 2013 |
Dr. Mehmet Müezzinoğlu | 2013 - 2016 |
Prof. Dr. Recep Akdağ | 2016 - 2017 |
Dr. Ahmet Demircan | 2017 - 2018 |
Dr. Fahrettin Koca | 2018–present |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.