Denver Department of Public Health & Environment

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The Denver Department of Public Health & Environment (DDPHE) is a charter-established department of the City & County of Denver, Colorado. [1] It is the city's nationally-accredited public health agency. [2] [3] DEH includes five divisions: Animal Protection and the Denver Animal Shelter (DAS), Community Health & Decision Support (CHDS), Environmental Quality (EQ), Public Health Inspections (PHI), and The Office of the Medical Examiner (OME). [4]

Contents

History

In 1990, the board of Denver Department of Health & Hospitals, then a city department, concluded and recommended to then Mayor Pena that the Coroner's Office (now known as the Office of the Medical Examiner in Environmental Health) be removed from the Denver Department of Health & Hospitals due to conflict of interest in the Coroner's duty to investigate suspicious deaths that occur in hospital settings. Since the Department of Health & Hospitals included Denver General Hospital, the board concluded that the Coroner's Office should be run as a "medical examiner system" separate from Denver General Hospital, and should meet the National Association of Medical Examiner's accreditation standards and be run by a Chief Forensic Pathologist.[ citation needed ]

In 1997, the Department of Health and Hospitals, a city charter department within the City & County of Denver, separated from the city to become Denver Health & Hospital Authority (DHHA). [5] [6] DHHA was created under State statute as an independent State Authority, run by a board of directors appointed by the Mayor. No longer a department under the city with city authority, the statute provides that as an independent authority "the city shall have no further control over the operations of the health system.”

Reason for separation: Among others,

  1. Allow Denver Health to be free of Denver's personnel and procurement system to enable DHHA to compete more effectively with other health care providers.
  2. As an independent entity, DHHA would be better able to raise charitable contributions and to compete with other hospitals for private-pay patients

The Denver Department of Environmental Health (DEH) was established to replace the Department of Health and Hospitals to be city's neutral and publicly accountable, public health agency. While DHHA maintained the medical service functions, DEH was established to administer and exercise control over all City programs and functions pertaining to public, mental and environmental health of the public and to enforce related City rules and regulations. DEH retains city charter authority and responsibilities, except the hospital and medical care functions. This authority includes:

References

  1. "Public Health & Environment". www.denvergov.org. Retrieved 2025-02-16.
  2. "Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment Maintains National Accreditation Status through the Public Health Accreditation Board | Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment". cdphe.colorado.gov. September 26, 2022. Archived from the original on August 30, 2023. Retrieved 2025-11-22.
  3. "Accreditation | CDPHEHELPHA". cdphe-lpha.colorado.gov. Retrieved 2025-11-22.
  4. "Denver Department of Public Health and Environment". Colorado Hub. Archived from the original on July 14, 2025. Retrieved 2025-10-23.
  5. "Denver Health and Hospital Authority Celebrates 20 Years". www.denverhealth.org. Retrieved 2025-02-17.
  6. "DIGEST OF BILLS ENACTED BY THE FIFTY-NINTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY - 1994 SECOND REGULAR SESSION" (PDF). leg.colorado.gov. June 1994.

See also

Divisions: