Honorific-Prefix: | The Most Excellent |
Silvia Calzón | |
Birth Name: | Silvia Calzón Fernández |
Birth Date: | 3 June 1975 |
Birth Place: | Utrera, Province of Seville, Spain |
Education: | Álvarez Quintero Ruiz Gijón University of Seville (M.D.) University of Granada (PhD) Escuela Andaluza de Salud Pública Pompeu Fabra University |
Occupation: | Epidemiologist and politician |
Office: | Secretary of State for Health |
Party: | Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) |
Term Start: | 5 August 2020 |
Primeminister: | Pedro Sánchez |
Predecessor: | Position reestablished |
Term End: | 29 November 2023 |
Successor: | José Luis Terreros Blanco |
Office1: | Director General of Juvenile Justice of the Regional Government of Andalusia |
Term Start1: | 16 September 2008 |
Term End1: | 5 May 2009 |
Office2: | Member of the Parliament of Andalusia |
Constituency2: | Seville |
Term Start2: | 5 May 2004 |
Term End2: | 3 April 2008 |
Office3: | Managing Director of the South of Seville Health Management Area |
Term Start3: | 2017 |
Term End3: | 2020 |
Office4: | Member of the Utrera City Council |
Term Start4: | 11 June 2011 |
Term End4: | 6 February 2015 |
Term Start5: | 16 June 2007 |
Term End5: | 16 September 2008 |
Term Start6: | 4 July 1999 |
Term End6: | 14 June 2003 |
Silvia Calzón Fernández (born 3 June 1975) is a Spanish epidemiologist and politician who is currently serving as Director of the Spanish Anti-Doping Agency since 2024. Previously, she served as Secretary of State for Health from 2020 to 2023.
Calzón was born in Utrera, Seville, Spain, on 3 June 1975.[1] She was the second of three children. Her father worked as a builder, while her mother managed the family's affairs at home.[2] Calzón studied at Álvarez Quintero and, later, Ruiz Gijón. She studied medicine at the University of Seville[3] and completed her residency as a specialist in preventive medicine and public health. Calzón has also earned a number of other degrees. She earned a doctorate in economic and business sciences from the University of Granada, a masters in public health and health management from the Andalusian School of Public Health, a masters in the economics of health and medicine from Pompeu Fabra University, and, finally, a diploma of specialization in gender and health from the Andalusian School of Public Health.
As a child, Calzón was interested in medicine and politics, joining the Socialist Youth of Spain (the youth arm of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party).[4] In 1999, she was elected for the first time to the Utrera City Council, serving simultaneously as deputy mayor.[5] In 2007, she ran for mayor of Utrera but lost to her opponent.
By 2020, Calzón was serving as the president of her political party's organization in Utrera.
In October 2013, Calzón began working as a primary epidemiologist for the Málaga-Valle del Guadalhorce Health District. In 2015, she resigned from the Utrera City Council to serve as the Managing Director of the South of Córdoba Health Management Area; two years later, in 2017, she took up the same job for the South of Seville Health Management Area. Starting in 2019, Calzón served as the primary epidemiologist for the Health District of Seville as part of the Andalusian Health Service.
In August 2020, the then-Minister of Health, Salvador Illa, reestablished the as the highest governing body of the Ministry of Health, with the goal of reforming the health response of Spain in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. Illa chose Calzón to lead the Secretariat, and she was officially named for the job on 5 August 2020,[6] making her the second-in-command of the Ministry of Health.
She left the office on November 2023 and, in January 2024, she was appointed director of the Spanish Anti-Doping Agency.[7]
Informational notes
Citations