DMWS History

After the war the service continued to provide welfare in service hospitals around the world, including operations in Aden, Egypt and Malaya. The Joint Committee of the Order of St John & the British Red Cross Society took over the parenting of the service in 1977, with additional funding from the Ministry of Defence in the form of a grant-in-aid.

Recent years have seen a good deal of change in the military medical system. Most military hospitals were closed, and service personnel in the UK are now treated in designated NHS hospitals with Ministry of Defence Hospital Units (MDHUs); in Germany services are contracted from Designated German Provider (DGP) hospitals. In 2001, the organisation became the Defence Medical Welfare Service, and as grant-in-aid ceased, was awarded the contract to provide hospital welfare services.

Today, DMWS continues to work in partnership with the Ministry of Defence to provide practical and emotional support to military personnel and other entitled patients in hospital. Welfare Officers of the Defence Medical Welfare Service work with patients from all the Armed Forces, wherever they serve, including working within Field Hospitals during times of conflict.