Following the
general election in June 2017,
Prime Minister Theresa May appointed
Jackie Doyle-Price as the UK's first minister with responsibility for mental health. The portfolio was further expanded in October 2018, on
World Mental Health Day, to include
suicide prevention. This occurred while the
UK government hosted the first ever global mental health summit. In July 2019,
Nadine Dorries was appointed to the position in the incoming
Johnson ministry, with additional responsibility for patient safety. As minister, Dorries assumed responsibility for the government's response to the impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic on people's mental health. The minister committed to an increase in government spending on
mental health as a result of the
lockdowns during the
COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, the position was raised from
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State to
Minister of State. During the
cabinet reshuffle in September 2021,
Gillian Keegan was appointed
Minister of State for Care and Mental Health, a position which combined with the mental health and
social care portfolios. In June 2022, the
department published the Draft Mental Health Bill, stating the government's intention to modernise the existing
Mental Health Act 1983. In September 2022, the incoming
Truss ministry divided the mental health and care portfolios and appointed
Caroline Johnson to the former, with responsibility for mental health and public health. Dr Johnson's tenure was unusually short, due to the
collapse of the government in the following month. In October 2022,
Maria Caulfield was appointed and given responsibility for mental health and women's health in the
Sunak ministry. == Responsibilities ==