Public Health Salaries in Connecticut

Connecticut has made great strides in improving some aspects of its public health, enjoying the seventh lowest rate of obesity and stroke in the country as of 2013. Some significant health challenges remain, however, and the state’s public health officials are addressing these through a combination of education, public policy, and research.

The level of per capita spending for public health in Connecticut increased 24.4% between 2007 and 2014, totaling $111.6 million in fiscal year 2013-14 according to the United Health Foundation. This increased spending means more jobs and adequate funding for the salaries of public health officials in the state.

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The Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) is a key provider of health information and environmental health efforts in the state. The state required epidemiologists at this department to track 82 types of diseases or cases of environmental poisoning such as mercury or carbon monoxide in 2014. Twenty-five of these items are deemed serious enough that health care providers must report them immediately by telephone. These priority cases range from such high-profile potential bioterrorism agents as anthrax and ricin poisoning, to foodborne outbreaks that involve at least two people.

One of the key priorities of the DPH is to build strategic partnerships with stakeholders in Connecticut to improve public health. The organization, Lead Public Health, is one of the results of these new partnership and outreach efforts. The combined efforts of state and local public health officials, non-governmental organizations, academics, and health care providers are helping to re-shape the state of public health in Connecticut.

Public Health Salary Expectations for the Hartford Area

The Connecticut Department of Labor provides salary data for a variety of public health professionals who worked in the Hartford Labor Market Area in 2014. These figures are comparable to what these professionals earn in Bridgeport and other metro areas of the state. While there is a great deal of variation in these public health salaries, professionals with degrees such as a Master of Public Health are much more likely to have salaries in the 90th percentile.

Public Health Profession
90th Percentile Annual Salary
Community and Social Services: Community Health Workers
$48188
Community and Social Services: Health Educators
$93725
Community and Social Services: Healthcare Social Workers
$88970
Community and Social Services: Rehabilitation Counselors
$77164
Community and Social Services: Substance Abuse & Behavioral Disorder Counselors
$69313
Computers and Mathematics: Statisticians
$115204
Healthcare Practitioners: Occupational Health & Safety Specialists
$91975
Life and Social Sciences: Biochemists and Biophysicists
$146770
Life and Social Sciences: Environmental Scientists & Specialists
$90528
Life and Social Sciences: Microbiologists
$86675
Life and Social Sciences: Social Scientists
$103438
Public Administration: Social & Community Service Managers
$96543

Statewide Public Health Professional Salary Analysis for Connecticut

For comparison, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics provides a full analysis of the hourly wages and annual salaries of public health professionals throughout Connecticut (2014).

Occupation
Employment
Annual mean wage
Social and Community Service Managers
3310
67590
Microbiologists
130
79780
Biological Scientists All Other
70
80860
Epidemiologists
120
79040
Environmental Scientists and Specialists Including Health
790
73940
Social Scientists and Related Workers All Other
270
89090
Social Science Research Assistants
40
42080
Substance Abuse and Behavioral Disorder Counselors
1700
46690
Rehabilitation Counselors
2570
44090
Healthcare Social Workers
1900
64540
Health Educators
520
59630
Community Health Workers
630
40230
Occupational Health and Safety Specialists
620
76480

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