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>Why and How
Maine’s Local Health Officers – a Brief History
When Maine became a state in 1820, there was very little public health infrastructure. This continued until 1885, when the legislature authorized Maine’s municipalities to establish local Boards of Health, each headed by a Local Health Officer. Over the next three decades, the State Board of Health gradually gained authority over statewide activities such as drinking water and restaurant inspections. The programmatic and regulatory functions of the State Board of Health became the Maine Department of Health in 1917.
In 1931, The Department of Health became the Bureau of Health within the Department of Health and Welfare. The Bureau of Health became the Maine CDC in 2005 as part of the new Department of Health and Human Services. Over the years, Maine’s public health community succeeded in confronting many difficult public health issues, often relying on collaboration with key stakeholders at the state and local levels. In recent years, there has been a recognized need for improved coordination and streamlining of public health efforts to build an ongoing system with the ability to address a myriad of health issues. After a three-year planning process by the forty-member Public Health Work Group, major revisions to the public health system in Maine are now being implemented.
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