I propose to take Questions Nos. 860 and 861 together.
There are eight Departments of Public Health covering the Republic of Ireland, each providing Public Health expertise and services locally and nationally. Public Health Doctors provide health protection services, advocate and contribute to health improvement and participate in health service development. Each Department is led by a Director of Public Health who is also a regional Medical Officer of Health and has a mandated responsibility and authority to investigate and control notifiable infectious diseases and outbreaks.
Our Public Health Doctors have been to the forefront of our response to the pandemic and the role of the public health doctor has transitioned very rapidly from one of leading small, confined teams, to now leading and directing the activities of a very broad range of organisations and large multidisciplinary teams. They have made an enormous contribution to the protection of everybody living in Ireland.
The past year has highlighted the critical national importance of an appropriately resourced public health workforce, and through the Covid-19 Path Ahead Plan, this Government has committed to investment in, and resourcing of public health and the delivery of a strengthened and reformed consultant-delivered public health model.
The new model will radically change the governance and operating structure within Public Health, introducing a more fit-for-purpose National and Regional management structure across each of the pillars of Public Health.
This will be a Consultant-led model which will enable the recruitment and retention of Public Health Doctors with the capability, autonomy, authority and accountability to lead multidisciplinary teams to deliver an agile, dynamic, intelligence-led public health service to protect the population from health threats, promote health, improve health services and tackle health inequalities.
The introduction of the Consultant role will also bring the status of this specialty in line with other countries, as Ireland has, for many years, been an outlier in not recognising the specialty at consultant status.