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A mobile COVID-19 testing center run by the Oregon Health Authority in November 2020.. The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) is a government agency in the U.S. state of Oregon.It was established by the passage of Oregon House Bill 2009 by the 75th Oregon Legislative Assembly, and split off from Oregon Department of Human Services.
Health Authority, Oregon; Health Licensing Office, Oregon; Health Services Division (Oregon Department of Human Services) Hearing Aids, Advisory Council on; Hispanic Affairs, Commission on; Homeland Security, Office of; Housing and Community Services Department; Human Services, Department of
The Oregon Medical Board is established and granted authority by Oregon Revised Statute 677, the Medical Practice Act. [2] The Board implements this authority through rules adopted under Oregon Administrative Rules chapter 847. [3] The 14 members of the Board are appointed by the Governor of Oregon and confirmed by the Oregon State Senate ...
PeaceHealth and Lifepoint Rehabilitation, the entities expected to work collaboratively on the new center, announced Thursday that they have received regulatory approval, through a certificate of ...
The Oregon Health Authority plans to offer free opioid overdose reversal kits to middle and high schools throughout the state, the agency said Tuesday.
Nov. 7—Governor Tina Kotek has appointed Dr. Sejal Hathi as the director of the Oregon Health Authority. Incoming Director Hathi brings over a decade of experience in medicine, health policy and ...
Starting in 2012, Oregon Health Plan clients have a new type of health plan called Coordinated Care Organizations or CCOs. A CCO is a network of all types of health care providers who are working together for people who receive health care coverage under the Oregon Health Plan.
Although the vast majority of these agencies are officially called "departments," the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials adopted "state health agency" as the generic term to reflect the fact that a substantial number of these agencies are no longer state "departments" in the traditional sense of a cabinet-level organizational unit dedicated exclusively to public health. [2]