Toronto Public Health


Toronto Public Health is the public health unit for the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is responsible for delivering public health programs and services, enforcing public health regulations, and advising Toronto City Council on health issues. The current unit was formed in 1998, when the former Metropolitan Toronto and its constituent municipalities of Toronto, York, North York, Scarborough, Etobicoke, and East York amalgamated into the current city of Toronto.

Role

In Ontario, under the Health Protection and Promotion Act, a public health unit is an official health agency established by a municipality. Health units administer health promotion and disease prevention programs to inform the public about healthy life-styles, communicable disease control, immunization, food premises inspection, healthy growth and development, health education for all age groups, and selected screening services.
Health units are governed by a board of health, which is an autonomous corporation under the Act and is administered by the Medical Officer of Health, who reports to the board of health.

Programs

Dinesafe

In 2001, under then medical officer of health Dr. Sheela Basrur, TPH introduced Dinesafe, the City of Toronto's food safety program which inspects restaurants for compliance with health regulations, and publicly displays results both on-site and on the City's website.

Infectious disease control

SARS

During the SARS crisis in 2003, TPH under then medical officer of health Dr. Sheela Basrur lead the City of Toronto's response to the virus. TPH created a management system, with different operational teams responsible for different parts of the response. TPH teams monitored those infected and under quarantine, were responsible for epidemiology, tracing the movements and contacts of those infected, and tracking the virus itself. Much of the public communications effort was also led by TPH, who organized community meetings, contacted school boards, and kept the population informed. As a result of SARS, TPH "totally reorganized itself", with a stronger liaison unit with acute-care facilities and changes being made to better address public health on a provincial and federal level.

COVID-19

TPH is responsible for coordinating the City of Toronto's response to the international outbreak of COVID-19. On January 7, 2020, TPH was informed of a "undiagnosed viral pneumonia" in Wuhan, China, and began to monitor and develop a response plan should it spread to Toronto. TPH released a statement on January 21 that they were "actively monitoring" the virus. On March 19, 2020, TPH ordered restaurants and bars to halt dine-in service amid evidence of community spread.

Board of Health

The Board of Health is a committee of the City of Toronto, governed by the Health Protection and Promotion Act, which directs and oversees the work of Toronto Public Health. It is composed of six city council members, six members of the public, and one education representative. A chair and vice-chair are elected from amongst its members.
NameTypeTerm startNotes
Ashna BowryMember31 January 2019
Joe CressyCouncillor13 December 2018Chair
Stephanie DonaldsonMember31 January 2019TDSB Trustee
Angela JonssonMember31 January 2019
Cynthia LaiCouncillor13 December 2018
Mike LaytonCouncillor13 December 2018
Ida Li PretiMember31 January 2019TCDSB Trustee
Jennifer McKelvieCouncillor31 January 2019
Kate MulliganMember31 January 2019
Gord PerksCouncillor13 December 2018
Peter WongMember31 January 2019
Soo WongMember31 January 2019
Kristyn Wong-TamCouncillor13 December 2018Vice Chair

Medical Officer of Health

The Medical Officer of Health is responsible for day-to-day operations of Toronto Public Health, and reports to Toronto City Council through the Board of Health.
NameTerm start/endNotes
Dr. Sheela Basrur1998–2004former Medical Officer of Health, Borough of East York
Dr. Barbara Yaffe2004Acting
Dr. David McKeown2004–2016former Medical Officer of Health, Borough of East York, City of Toronto and Region of Peel
Dr. Barbara Yaffe2016Acting; now Director of Communicable Disease Control and Associate MOH
Dr. Eileen de Villa2017–presentformer Medical Officer of Health for the Region of Peel