Public Health Agency of Canada
Agency overview | |
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Formed | 2004 |
Preceding agency |
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Superseding agency |
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Jurisdiction | Canada |
Headquarters | Ottawa, Ontario |
Employees | 1,800 |
Annual budget | $477.2 million CAD (2005–2006)[1] |
Minister responsible | |
Agency executive |
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Parent department | Health Canada |
Child agencies |
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Key document | |
Website | www.phac-aspc.gc.ca |
The Public Health Agency of Canada (French: Agence de la santé publique du Canada) is an agency of the Government of Canada that is responsible for public health, emergency preparedness, and response and infectious and chronic disease control and prevention. It was formed by Order in Council in 2004 and subsequently by legislation that came into force December 15, 2006 and it is member of the Federal Health Portfolio (along with Health Canada, the Canadian Institute of Health Research, and other organizations).
The head of the Public Health Agency is the Chief Public Health Officer of Canada. The current Chief is Dr. Gregory W. Taylor. As the Deputy Minister responsible for the Public Health Agency of Canada, the Chief Public Health Officer reports to the Minister of Health. As the Federal Government's lead public health official, the Chief Public Health Officer provides advice to the Minister of Health and the Government of Canada on issues concerning the health of Canadians.
Its headquarters are located in two pillars—one is in Ottawa, the other is the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the location of Canada's only Level 4 microbiology lab for human health. At the time of its creation in 1998, most of the agency's staff were located in the former Gandalf Technologies building in Nepean, south of Ottawa, and were part of Health Canada's Population and Public Health Branch.
Responsibilities
- Disease Control and Detection
- Health Safety
- travel alerts
- immunization and vaccine
- Emergency Preparedness
- Health Promotion
- Injury Prevention
- Research and Statistics
Organizational structure
- Chief Public Health Officer
- Senior Assistant Deputy Minister—Population and Public Health Integration Branch
- Assistant Deputy Minister—Infectious Disease and Emergency Prepardness
- Deputy Chief Public Health Officer—Health Protection and Chronic Disease Prevention Branch
- Executive Director—Corporate Secretariat
See also
For similar agencies, please see the list of national public health agencies
- VSV-EBOV, an Ebola virus vaccine developed by PHAC
References
External links
- Public Health Agency of Canada Official Website
- Public Health Agency of Canada's channel on YouTube
- National Microbiology Laboratory Official Website
- Bill C-5: Public Health Agency of Canada Act