Austin Public Health

Austin Public Health Programs

The Austin Healthy Adolescent (AHA) Program engages, empowers, and collaborates with communities across Travis County to support youth in taking ownership of their own health and working to advance the health of their communities.

Fast-Track Cities is a global partnership with the goal of ending urban HIV epidemics by getting to zero new HIV infections, zero AIDS-related deaths, and zero HIV-related stigma. Launched on World AIDS Day 2014, the partnership also advances efforts

The Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention (CDIP) program goal is to make the healthy and safe choice the easy choice. CDIP works within the community to prevent and control chronic disease and prevent unintentional injuries. To learn more about Injur

Health begins where we live, learn, work, and play. Our opportunity for health starts long before we need medical care. All Americans should have the opportunity to make the choices that allow them to live a long, healthy life, regardless of income,

The 78744 Community Youth Development Program is a state-funded program that provides an array of juvenile delinquency prevention services to support families and enhance the positive development of youth only in the 78744 zip code.

The APH Early Childhood Team does public health education, prevention and promotion focused on young children, their families and the early childhood workforce.

Austin Public Health is a great department to join. We are proud of our diverse workforce and the work they do. Employees at all levels are selected based on their qualifications, skills, and abilities.

Austin Public Health controls disease-carrying pests like mosquitoes and rodents through monitoring, prevention, and community education to keep Austin healthy and safe.

Disease surveillance is at the heart of a public health system. It is used to monitor disease trends over time, to detect disease outbreaks, and to increase our knowledge of risk factors that contribute to disease development.