HOMER RICE - ADMINISTRATOR FOR
LEON COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT

My
entire professional life has been spent in the field of Public
Health. When I say that to my friends, they don’t know what
it means. Even though Public Health is all around us, it goes
unnoticed until a crisis arises. It is the “invisible
profession”. When I started in Public Health in 1979, I have
to admit I didn’t know what it was either. I had just
graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Biology and needed a
job. I saw an opening in Sarasota County for a Sanitarian so
I applied for the job and got it. Since then, I have worked
30 years in Public Health, I am a Registered Sanitarian (RS),
I have a Masters of Public Health Degree in Environmental and
Occupational Health and am working on my dissertation for my
PhD in Community and Family Health. After all that, I think I
can finally explain what Public Health is – it’s everything.
When you got up this morning you probably washed your face
and got a drink of water. If you are a woman you may have taken a vitamin with
Folic Acid in it. You might have eaten a breakfast cereal that was fortified
with vitamins. You probably brushed your teeth with toothpaste that contained
fluoride, or if you live in the City of Tallahassee you may know your water
contains fluoride. When you got into your car you probably fastened your seat
belt. If you took your children to school, you know they had to have certain
immunizations to enter school. Maybe you got a flu shot this year. If you
didn’t have time for breakfast at home, maybe you stopped someplace to eat.
Every thing you did so far is Public Health. Public Health inspectors in
different agencies made sure your water was safe to drink and your food was safe
to eat. Public Health advocates lobbied for fluoride in your water and your
toothpaste to prevent cavities; they advocate for folic acid for women to
prevent birth defects and they developed the policies that created seat belt
laws. Public Health nurses gave you your flu shots and childhood
immunizations. Public Health is a system of many doctors, nurses, agencies and
staff that works together to assure the health of the community.
At the Leon County Health Department we work everyday to
meet the needs of the residents of Leon County. We have inspectors in
Environmental Health that address food, water, wastewater, swimming pools and
sanitation. We work with Emergency Management to respond in disaster, making
sure special needs clients are cared for in shelters and things return to normal
as soon as possible. We investigate disease outbreaks and treat communicable
diseases, educating people to reduce the number of new cases of HIV and Sexually
Transmitted Diseases (STD). We have nurses and health aides in most schools to
help you keep your children healthy. We provide dental care to low income
children and work with volunteer dentists to help adults with no access to
care. We run clinics for Family Planning, Communicable Disease, STD, Nutrition
and WIC. We contract with other providers to give access to primary medical
care for low income residents. We make drugs available for AIDS patients that
prolong their lives. We provide access to mammograms and cervical cancer
screenings for low income women and follow through to see they are treated if
needed. We continually inform and educate on issues such as obesity, nutrition,
diabetes, tobacco, and healthy lifestyles. We work with multiple partners in
the community to address issues such as low birth weight babies and infant
mortality. We do many other things, from providing access to mental health
services to educating pregnant women on child birth and breastfeeding. And
everything we do is for YOU, the residents and visitors to Leon County.
To Your Health!
Homer J. Rice, RS, MPH, Doctoral Candidate