In 1866, the state legislature passed the
Metropolitan Health Law and established the NYC
Metropolitan Board of Health, and in 1870 the legislature replaced it with the NYC Department of Health. The State Board of Health was created 18 May 1880 by the
103rd Legislature. The State Department of Health and its commissioner were created by an act of 19 February 1901 of the
124th Legislature, superseding the board. The earliest New York state laws regarding public health were quarantine laws for the port of New York, first passed by the
New York General Assembly in 1758. The
1793 Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic precipitated the 1799–1800 creation of the New York Marine Hospital, and in 1801 its resident physician and the health officers of the port were constituted as the New York City board of health. The
1826–1837 cholera pandemic precipitated further legislation. In 1847 a law mandated
civil registration of
vital events (births, marriages, and deaths). The
1881–1896 cholera pandemic further caused an expansion of its powers to compel reporting and to perform the duties of local boards of health. was a series of attacks on the New York Marine Hospital in Staten Island The
certificate of need (CON) requirement was created by New York in 1964. In 1965 the department was given central responsibility over hospitals and related facilities. 2010 state budget legislation abolished the Public Health Council and the State Hospital Review and Planning Council and consolidated their functions into the newly created
Public Health and Health Planning Council (PHHPC). The Nursing Care Quality Protection Act was amended in 2021 requiring general hospitals to establish clinical staffing committees to develop and oversee clinical staffing plans, to include specific nurse-to-patient ratios for each unit and work shift. The state implemented
Medicaid in 1966 and designated the state
Department of Social Services (DSS) as the "single state agency" but required it to contract with the Health Department. The Social Services Department and local social districts were responsible for eligibility determinations and paying claims, while the Health Department and local health districts were responsible for settings standards (including fees schedules) and supervising and surveilling providers. In 2012, the Health Department started assuming administrative responsibilities for Medicaid from the counties. By 1970 the state began to regulate health insurance reimbursement rates, in 1983 began
all-payer rate setting, and by 1986-1988 had moved to a
case-based system. In 1982–1983 the state overhauled the hospital reimbursement system by imposing revenue caps, creating regional bad debt and charity care pools, and shifting all payors into a uniform prospective payment methodology (NYPHRM I). In 1987 the New York State Council on Graduate Medical Education was created by executive order. In 1988 the state established a mandatory
DRG-based case payment system for all payors, continued bad debt and charity pools through payor add-ons and revenue assessments, provided direct and indirect cost reimbursements for
graduate medical education, added quality protections and HMO negotiation authority, and aimed to curb hospital cost growth (NYPHRM III). In 1996 these were replaced by the current
Health Care Reform Act (HCRA), allowing negotiated reimbursement rates and establishing tax funding for public goods like graduate medical education,
charity care, and public health. The Health Care Reform Act of 2000 (HCRA 2000) was a major extension and modification that made significant changes to how New York State funded hospitals, subsidized care for the uninsured, and managed health insurance programs. In 2006 the Hospital Financial Assistance Law (HFAL or Manny's Law) was enacted requiring hospitals to adopt and publicize uniform financial assistance policies, including income-based limits on charges, sliding-scale discounts, reasonable payment terms, and restrictions on aggressive collections, as a condition for receiving ICP payments. In 1998 the department was given authority over the health insurance external appeals process. ==List of commissioners==