MCHD is seeking applicants for the Administrator Position
Administrator is responsible for all aspects and functions of managing the health department, to include managing staff, public health programs, and community relations; all aspects of business control including strategic planning, human resources, fiscal management, emergency planning, and policy management. Duties include department Security Officer, Custodian of Records, County Health Officer, and Local Registrar. Position is accountable to an elected Board of Trustees.
Administrator is a salaried position working a minimum of 40 hours each week, requiring a Bachelor’s Degree and three years minimum supervision/management experience. Essential skills include ethical conduct; exceptional written and verbal communication skills; financial, business and leadership acumen; with a good head for strategic thinking.
Salary is commensurate with experience. Benefits include health and life insurance, optional supplemental insurances for vision and dental, Lager’s retirement, accrued vacation and sick time, and several paid holidays.
Submit completed application and resume by 5:00 p.m. June 15, 2024 to:
Macon County Health Department
503 N. Missouri Street
Macon, MO 63552
Or email: mchambers@maconmohealth.org
Applications are at the health department or can be found under the Forms tab.
Interviews will be at the discretion of the Macon County Health Department Board of Trustees. Position start date will be winter 2024. The Health Department Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all applications.
Macon County Health Department is an equal opportunity employer.
Macon County Resource Guide
The Women’s Health Coalition in Macon is a group that is working to help alleviate the health inequities women face in Macon. They used data from the Macon County Health Department’s Community Needs Assessment and Samaritan Hospital’s Community Needs Assessment to learn more about what concerns and issues our community was facing to help create a strategy of overcoming these barriers that influence health.
One of the top concerns seen by the coalition was a lack of an updated resource guide; a place where community members could find phone numbers, locations, and service information for area businesses, agencies, and service providers for our county.
We have broken down the resource guide into various sections:
- Housing & Shelter
- Community Services
- Emergency services & city offices
- Faith based organizations
- Medical
- Food & Services
- Education
- Parenting
- Transportation
Download your copy for free!
Macon County Resource GuideIf you’re interested in learning more about the Women’s Health Coalition and being a part of the group, contact Erin Main at the Macon County Health Department.
Social Media Policy
April 27, 2022
Social Media policy – Approved policy
Thank you for connecting with the Macon County Health Department via our Facebook page and Instagram Page. On this page, the Macon County Health Department welcomes dialogue regarding public health in Missouri.
Please do not post content of the following nature on this page, or it may be removed without notice:
- Profane language or content;
- Content that promotes, fosters or perpetuates discrimination against protected classes;
- Advertisements, prize contests or giveaways. This includes promotion or endorsement of any financial, commercial or non-governmental agency;
- Apparent spamming or trolling, including comments with links to external online sites;
- Copyrighted or trademarked images or graphics. Imagery posted should be owned by the user;
- Personal information such as address or phone number;
- Off topic comments; and
- Comments, photos or videos that suggest or encourage illegal activity or harm.
The Macon County Health Department will remove posts and comments that violate the above guidelines and may block users who repeatedly violate them. Posts by public users of this page may not reflect the views of the Macon County Health Department its employees, or its affiliates.
The Macon County Health Department monitors this page during the hours of 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and will respond to inquiries as soon as possible.
COVID-19 Notification Update
November 12, 2020
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Macon County, MO) – Macon County COVID-19 cases have been surging these past few weeks.
As of last night, the county is at 154 active cases – this is up from an average of 30 or less active
cases during October. The health department is receiving positive cases at a rate between 15
to 25 daily these past two weeks. COVID-19 illnesses range from mild (sinus congestion,
stomach ache, fever) to more severe (body aches, loss of sense of taste and smell) to critical
hospitalizations (low oxygen levels, respiratory failure, blood clots).
We are sad to announce yet another death where COVID-19 was a factor, bringing the county’s
death count to 7 (6 in the six weeks).
Given the surge in cases, Macon County Health Department has made changes in our
notification processes. We have dedicated more people to contact tracing and notification
efforts by bringing on one part time staff member to full time; pulling in volunteers to help
some evenings and weekends; and, dedicating other staff to contact tracing efforts in lieu of
their normal job functions. We are altering our clinics schedules to accommodate this shift in
duties. We have had 3 people working daily on contact tracing seven days a week, morning to
night, and are in the process of hiring a full time LPN to support case investigation efforts.
Our mandate from DHSS is to contact COVID-19 positive people 21 years and younger within 24
hours to begin their investigations. Due to that mandate, some adults will not be contacted
immediately upon testing positive. We ask that if you receive notification from your primary
care provider or test site that you are positive, that you self-isolate away from household
members as much as possible until we can contact you. During this surge, our goal is to make
contact with you within two-to-three days of testing positive and then again as you are released
from isolation. Those whose illness take a turn for the worse we ask that you contact your
primary care provider or emergency room for guidance.
Those who have been contacted and asked to self-quarantine, our goal is to send a letter
outlining quarantine dates and instructions for self-quarantine. We are no longer able to
contact those on quarantine on a regular basis as in the past, so ask that if you have questions
or concerns to contact the health department.