New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has appointed Dr. Alister Martin, a seasoned emergency physician and Harvard Medical School professor, to lead the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
As the head of this agency, responsible for over 7,000 employees and a $1.6 billion annual budget, Martin will oversee various critical services such as public health emergencies management, clinic operations, child care center inspections, and issuance of birth and death certificates.
In his new role, Dr. Martin has emphasized the need to make healthcare more affordable for New Yorkers. "We're going to ensure that when a family walks into a health center, they can walk out not just healthier, but more financially stable," he stated during a press conference.
The city's lowest-income communities, predominantly Black and Latino New Yorkers, face significant disparities in health outcomes, with residents experiencing higher rates of chronic and preventable illnesses. Martin acknowledged the threat of rising insurance rates due to Medicaid cutbacks and expiring ACA subsidies, vowing to safeguard coverage for vulnerable populations.
As an expert in emergency medicine and public health policy, Dr. Martin brings extensive experience from his time as a White House fellow and on an advisory panel with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He also founded the Vot-ER program, which helped emergency room patients register to vote.
Mayor Mamdani praised Martin's unique blend of front-line public health expertise and high-level government experience, stating that he is well-equipped to lead the city's health department.
As the head of this agency, responsible for over 7,000 employees and a $1.6 billion annual budget, Martin will oversee various critical services such as public health emergencies management, clinic operations, child care center inspections, and issuance of birth and death certificates.
In his new role, Dr. Martin has emphasized the need to make healthcare more affordable for New Yorkers. "We're going to ensure that when a family walks into a health center, they can walk out not just healthier, but more financially stable," he stated during a press conference.
The city's lowest-income communities, predominantly Black and Latino New Yorkers, face significant disparities in health outcomes, with residents experiencing higher rates of chronic and preventable illnesses. Martin acknowledged the threat of rising insurance rates due to Medicaid cutbacks and expiring ACA subsidies, vowing to safeguard coverage for vulnerable populations.
As an expert in emergency medicine and public health policy, Dr. Martin brings extensive experience from his time as a White House fellow and on an advisory panel with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He also founded the Vot-ER program, which helped emergency room patients register to vote.
Mayor Mamdani praised Martin's unique blend of front-line public health expertise and high-level government experience, stating that he is well-equipped to lead the city's health department.