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Tverskova Anna Alexandrovna
Tverskova Anna Alexandrovna

Anna Tverskova was born in 1982 in Ulyanovsk.

Education

She graduated from the Faculty of Economics and Mathematics of Ulyanovsk State Technical University.

She took advanced training courses in the following programs: "State Civil Service: Modern State and Prospects for Development" of the Federal State Budgetary Institution "Russian University of Economics named after G.V. Plekhanov," "Organization of Work of State Authorities and Local Self-Government Bodies on the Implementation of the Support Mechanism of the Federal State Budgetary Institution" Ulyanovsk State University, "" Public-Private Partnership "Institute for the Development of Public-Private Partnership in Moscow and Other Training Courses.

Career

2013-2020

Anna Tverskova began working in the system of social protection of the population in 2013, was responsible for various areas and was the developer of regulatory legal acts in the field of social services.

In December 2020, she was approved for the post of First Deputy Minister of Family, Demographic Policy and Social Welfare of the Ulyanovsk Region.

2022

In January 2022, she was approved as Minister of Family, Demographic Policy and Social Welfare of the Ulyanovsk Region.

2023: Appointment of Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Ulyanovsk Region, supervision of health care in the region

In mid-October 2023, the governor of the Ulyanovsk region, Alexei Russkikh, announced a large-scale reform of the regional government, including in the health care management system. As part of this reorganization, Minister of Social Development Anna Tverskova was appointed Deputy Prime Minister in charge of health and social welfare of the population. Instead of Tverskova, the regional Ministry of Social Development will be headed by Dmitry Batrakov, who served as deputy minister.

According to Alexei Russkikh, Anna Tverskova, as a minister, was able to "seriously systematize the work of the social sphere." She will be able to extend this experience to "the regional health system requiring a serious managerial restructuring."[1]

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