Updates + Notices
Read below for updates on the agency, our projects, and our data, as well as timely public health notices or statements
Soap, Suds, and Science: Teaching Kids Why Handwashing Matters This Fall
Handwashing is one of the simplest, most powerful ways to protect your family’s health. Learn how to teach kids the “why” behind soap and germs with a fun science experiment, history lessons, and easy daily routines. This fall, turn clean hands into a lasting healthy habit!
Making Homecoming Safer: Tips for Parents and Hosts
Homecoming season is better when parents work together. Connect with other families, share expectations, and set clear rules about alcohol and substance use. Together, we can help teens celebrate safely and confidently.
Find safe hosting tips and resources at safe365ny.org.
Public Health Basics: Food Safety
Food safety standards have increased greatly since the early 1900s in America. Some of these standards are often enforced by the local health department. Restaurants and kitchens are expected to follow the same guidance provided for cooking in your own home. Rigorous standards were developed in the 1900s after dangerous conditions of food processing plants were widely-shared, and incidents such as cook Mary Mallon, who spread Typhoid Fever through her cooking.
Striving for Strong School Attendance
The return of school in the fall is the perfect opportunity to review ways to ensure that children are making it to school on time and are prepared for the year. Attendance is a critical driver of student success from Pre-K through high school.
Recovery and Suicide Prevention
For Recovery Month and Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, we examine the intersection of these issues
Protecting Our Waters: The Power of Proper Drug Disposal
While it’s important to dispose of unused and unneeded medications, flushing is usually not the answer
Candy, Costumes, and Caution: Tips to Stay Safe this Halloween
Leading up to every Halloween, we see a spike in worries around children’s safety. There are some very real safety concerns, but the biggest worry for most parents should be cars.
Facts and Misconceptions of Fall and Winter Suicide Patterns
It’s often thought to be common knowledge that deaths by suicide spike in the holiday months between November and January. But then why doesn’t any data support this claim?