Guides / Guías:
- COVID19 CARES Act
- CDC Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- CDC COVID-19 Task Force
- Coronavirus COVID-19 John Hopkins University Interactive Map
- World Health Organization (WHO)
- COVID-19 World Health Organization (WHO) Interactive Map
Coronavirus Information/ Información Coronavirus:
- Coronavirus OnePager Spanish
- Coronavirus OnePager English
- PRPHT Onepager COVID-19 Businesses in Spanish
- PRPHT Onepager COVID-19 Businesses in English
- Consejos psicológicos para largos periodos dentro de casa
- COVID-19, el lugar de trabajo y el hogar: ¿Qué debemos saber y hacer?
- Talking to Children About COVID-19 (Coronavirus) A Parent Resource
- Upcoming Webinars and Events
Activities for Children / Actividades para Niños:
- Libro de Actividades Achú COVID-19
- HOLA! soy un VIRUS, primo de la gripa y el resfriado…
- Libro: Actividad Gérmenes en Español
- Paint By Numbers
Videos:
Entrevista Dr. Jorge L. Santana Bagur Catedrático de Medicina e Infectología Recinto de Ciencias Médicas- UPR
Resources / Recursos:
Pruebas Positivas Últimos 14días
- Encuesta de Colaboración para promoción de Salud
- Análisis datos COVID-19: Equipo de Modelación Matemática-Epidemiológica (EMME)
- Entrevista exclusiva con el Dr. Jorge L. Santana Bagur, Catedrático de Medicina e Infectología del Recinto de Ciencias Médicas de la UPR; contesta todas las preguntas sobre el COVID-19. Encuesta de Colaboración para promoción de Salud
Vea la explicación correcta y precisa, sobre lo que es el Coronavirus (COVID-19), cómo se contagia y cómo podemos prevenirlo. - Cápsulas Informativas COVID-19.
Vea preguntas específicas sobre el COVID-19 - COVID-19, el lugar de trabajo y el hogar: ¿Qué debemos saber y hacer?
Artículos Relevantes / Relevant Articles
Eventos y Webinars / Upcoming Webinars and Events
- COVID19 CARES Act
Ayúdanos a evaluar cómo se desarrolla la situación del COVID-19 en Puerto Rico. Accede a el enlace: bit.ly/SintomasCOVID19 y llena la encuesta diariamente para conocer cuántas personas pudieran tener síntomas.
Ejemplos de Reportes Diarios:
Artículos Relevantes / Relevant Articles: Coronavirus (COVID-19)
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Libro de Actividades Achú COVID-19 / Activity Book Achoo COVID-19
Libro de Actividades Achú COVID-19 Edición 2
Consejos psicológicos para largos periodos dentro de casa
HOLA! soy un VIRUS, primo de la gripa y el resfriado...
Presentación Conferencia Magistral
Telemedicina y Telesalud
La nueva realidad ante el COVID-19
En tiempos del COVID-19, se ha demostrado la importancia de promover los servicios de salud a través de Telemedicina y Telesalud en Puerto Rico. Esta metodología permite el acceso rápido a los profesionales de salud, maximizando tiempo, servicios y alcance.
Got Questions? / ¿Tienes Preguntas?
Public Health Week Blogs
Blogs Semana de Salud Pública
Prevención del cáncer por VPH en Puerto Rico: Vacunación, educación y acceso
En una entrevista para la Revista Medicina y Salud Pública, la Dra. Mariela Alvarado, epidemióloga y Directora de nuestra División de Epidemiología Social y Evaluación mencionó diversos aspectos clave sobre los desafíos y avances en la lucha contra estos cánceres en el archipiélago.
Llega el Fideicomiso de Salud Pública con sus libros que sanan a la Escuela Cruz María Gómez de Malavé en Añasco
Esta iniciativa tuvo como objetivo brindar herramientas para trabajar de manera divertida y creativa con las emociones de los niños ante las amenazas de huracanes y la violencia intracomunitaria.
Resumen 2024 de los Seminarios sobre los Determinantes Sociales de la Salud
Durante el 2024 creamos una serie de seminarios organizados por el Grupo de Interés en Determinantes Sociales de la Salud y la Equidad en Salud. Estos encuentros virtuales tuvieron como objetivo educar sobre los factores sociales que impactan nuestra salud, fomentar colaboraciones multidisciplinarias y proponer soluciones a los problemas sociales y de salud que afectan a las comunidades puertorriqueñas. A continuación un breve resumen de los temas y logros de este año y los planes para 2025.
Vision
Achieve sustainable health equity in Puerto Rican communities and improve their quality of life through innovation, collaboration and community engagement.
Mission
Serve as trusted ally working with private and public partners to identify and execute community-led, evidence-based solutions.
Our Priorities
The Puerto Rico Public Health Trust (PRPHT) priorities improve public health capacity, systems and outcomes by fostering innovation, leveraging resources and building partnerships to improve the public’s health.
- Emergency Preparedness, Recovery and Response
Chronic Disease: diabetes, obesity, etc.
Health Equity
Climate change
Mental Health
Opioid Epidemic
The PR Science, Technology and Research Trust (PRSTRT) is a 501(c)(3). PRSTRT was designated by the Puerto Rico legislature as Puerto Rico Public Health Institute. The PRPHT has been set up as a program powered by the Trust and its mission, vision and objectives was developed with a group of collaborators that include participation from the P.R. Department of Health, Universities (including the UPR Medical Sciences Campus, Ponce Health Sciences University and Universidad Central del Caribe), Health Care Providers (including the Primary Care Association and the Hospital Association) and Businesses (including Impactivo Consulting and FDI Clinical Research).
The PRPHT has plans to carry out activities and programs for the health of the population. The PRPHT is led by an advisory board of public health experts from the US and Puerto Rico.
We aim to have an immediate and sustainable impact in the public health sector. In keeping with the efforts of our collaborators, the PRPHT endeavours to make a change and to create a positive and significant impact on the public’s health through its agility, capacity and commitment. The PRPHT’s main competencies are population-based health program delivery, fiscal/administrative management and public health expertise.
Our Reach
The PRPHT is focused on Puerto Rican communities within and outside of Puerto Rico. Due to their nature, some focus areas and initiatives will affect primarily the geographic region of the island of Puerto Rico (such as: emergency preparedness). Other initiatives will include the Puerto Rican diaspora living abroad.
Our Work
We have a strong community focus to improve the quality of life and achieve health equity in Puerto Rican communities. Concurrently, we plan to develop our capabilities and services to offer them to third parties (e.g. government and private sectors) in order for them to work more effectively and achieve their goals. Since 2018, we have launched two new programs: 1. Capacity Building for Jurisdictional Hurricane Recovery – Puerto Rico Staffing Enhancements; Facilitation of the hiring of over 100 staff for the PRDOH. 2. Hurricane Hub Technical Assistance Center; Coordination of workforce training and technical assistance.
“Hablemos de Salud Pública todo el tiempo”
We envision enabling leaders in all fields and areas of work in the community—such as churches, schools, businesses, academic institutions and municipalities—to challenge systems, tackle the root causes of health inequities, and build healthier communities in Puerto Rico.
Community engagement is a strategic process with the specific purpose of working with identified groups of people, whether they are connected by geographic location, special interest, or affiliation to identify and address issues affecting their well-being.
What we aim to:
- Connect with communities
- Listen to their needs
- Partner for solutions
In Order to:
Catalyze fundamental activities in health and health care systems to achieve measurably better outcomes for all Puerto Ricans.
Enable all families to attain their optimal physical, social and emotional well-being, including growing up in a healthy community.
Create the conditions that allow communities and their residents to reach their greatest health potential addressing all social determinants of health.
Engage a diverse array of leaders in all sectors with the vision, experience, and drive to help build a Culture of Health.
Activities will include:
- Participating in Community Conversations
- Facilitation of the growth of local heath coalitions
- Mapping of Assets and Data
- Identification of community leaders and enhancement of their leadership skills. Positions identified such as Promotores de Salud/ Community Health Workers and Community Research Liaisons.
- Understanding existing community networks (community and system), strengths and gaps.
- Identification of health priorities via data collection; using Promotores, comunitarios and Community Based Participatory Research practices.
- Supporting the needed infrastructure, resources and technology to meet identified needs.
- Hurricane Response Hub (HUB)
- Caribbean Strong 2019
- Proyecto Agua Limpia
- ASTHO and the Puerto Rico Science, Technology & Research Trust are supporting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Puerto Rico Department of Health in the shared work of rebuilding Puerto Rico’s public health infrastructure and capacity. Through the Capacity Building for Jurisdictional Hurricane Recovery – Puerto Rico Staffing Capacity Enhancements project, these partners are directly hiring and managing administrative and technical experts within the jurisdiction to work alongside the Puerto Rico Department of Health staff to accomplish recovery activities and implement health programs during a two-year period. Activities are focused around the areas of environmental health, community risk mitigation, death registry processes, healthcare infection control surveillance and prevention, vector-borne diseases and disaster reconstitution management funding.
The purpose of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to invite R21 applications proposing the innovative analysis of existing (publicly available) nationally representative U.S. cross-sectional and longitudinal data, to investigate novel scientific ideas and/or to generate new models, systems, tools, methods, or technologies that have the potential for significant impact on biomedical or biobehavioral research in areas relevant to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) – Center for Tobacco Products (CTP). Other publicly available data sets would be considered depending on the analyses to be conducted; however, nationally representative analyses will receive priority. Applications not using nationally representative data sets will need to provide justification why the data set is unique, and why the research questions cannot be answered from a (publicly available) nationally representative data set. This FOA encourages the analyses of public use datasets that may inform tobacco regulatory actions in the United States (U.S.).
The awards under this FOA will be administered by NIH using funds that have been made available through FDA-CTP and the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (P.L. 111-31). Research results from this FOA are expected to generate findings and data that are directly relevant in informing the FDA’s regulation of the manufacture, distribution, and marketing of tobacco products to protect public health. Research Projects must address the research priorities related to the regulatory authority of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Center for Tobacco Products (CTP).
Funds Available and Anticipated Number of Awards
The number of awards is contingent upon funding availability, submission of a sufficient number of meritorious applications, and programmatic priority.
NIH, via support from the FDA Center for Tobacco products (CTP), intends to fund up to 5 R21s, corresponding to a total of $1.0 million for fiscal year 2020. Future year amounts will depend on availability of funds.
Award Budget
The combined budget for direct costs for the entire project period may not exceed $275,000. No more than $200,000 in direct cost may be requested in any single year.
Award Project Period
The maximum project period is 2 years.
Our Advisory Committee
José F. Cordero, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACMG
José F. Cordero, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACMG
José F. Cordero, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACMG
Patel Distinguished Professor of Public Health
Head, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
College of Public Health
University of Georgia
Dr. José F. Cordero is the Patel Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Chair, of the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the College of Public Health at the University of Georgia. He served for 27 years in the US Public Health Service at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). He held positions focused on improving the health of mothers, children and adults in programs such as, immunizations, birth defects and disabilities, including Deputy Director, National Immunization Program, and Founding Director of the National Center on Birth Defects.
He served as Dean of the School of Public Health in the University of Puerto Rico and serves as Executive Director of the Puerto Rico Brain Trust for Tropical Diseases Research and Prevention, a unit of the Puerto Rico Science, Technology, and Research Trust.
Ronald L. Quincy, PHD
Ronald L. Quincy, PHD
Ronald L. Quincy, PHD – Biographical Statement
Dr. Quincy is a Professor of Practice, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning & Public Policy, and Senior Faculty Fellow, John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Dr. Quincy also serves as Co-Academic Director of the Collaborative Center for Community-Based Research & Service; Faculty Director for the Rutgers Honors Social & Economic Justice Program in South Africa; and Academic Director, Mandela Washington Fellowship Rutgers Civic Leadership Institute (an initiative of former President Obama).
Dr. Quincy served as a cabinet member for two Michigan governors. Ron’s previous positions include: Associate Vice President, Harvard University, and Assistant to the President, Harvard; Executive Director, Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change; and Executive Director, Congressional Black Caucus Foundation.
President Reagan appointed Ron to a White House Fellowship, where he served as a Foreign Policy Advisor in the State Department and Special Assistant to the Secretary of HUD. He also served as Chair of the Board of Directors of the White House Fellows Foundation, and Association, during part of the Clinton Administration. Ron’s professional development & personal mentors included Mrs. Coretta Scott King and the Honorable Nelson Mandela.
Richard J. Cohen, PhD, FACHE
Richard J. Cohen
Richard J. Cohen, PhD, FACHE
President and Chief Executive Officer, Public Health Management Corporation
Recognized nationally as an authority in the public health management arena, Richard J. Cohen, Ph.D., FACHE, has been the President and Chief Executive Officer of Public Health Management Corporation based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, since 1980. Dr. Cohen leads more than 3,500 employees, more than 350 public health programs, and a family of subsidiary organizations with an operating budget of approximately $310 million, serving individuals, families and communities with integrated health, human and social services. Dr. Cohen’s more than 30 publications and conference presentations get to the heart of public health dilemmas, with insight into the marketing of human services, developing leadership, establishing public/private partnerships, assessing long-term versus short-term costs, understanding hospital utilization patterns, and many other critical topics. Dr. Cohen has held leadership roles in many distinguished health organizations that include the American Public Health Association, the Alliance of Children and Families, the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, the Pennsylvania Public Health Association, the College of Physicians of Philadelphia and the American College of Health Care Executives. He holds a Ph.D. in Social Sciences/Psychiatry from the Medical College of Pennsylvania, an M.A. in Clinical Psychology from Temple University, and a B.A. in Psychology from University of Maine.
Lt. Col. Wilson Ariza
Lieutenant Colonel Wilson Ariza
LIEUTENANT COLONEL WILSON ARIZA, Medical Service Corps, U.S. ARMY, Retired
Mr. Wilson Ariza, Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army (Retired), is the National Associate Director for Simulation-Based Medical Education Training at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Mr. Ariza is responsible for providing short and long range simulation-based training solutions to be delivered to 23 Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs) and 150 VA Medical Centers
On January 2014, after 25 years of Military Service, LTC Ariza retired as the U.S. Army Medical Simulation Program Manager, Program Executive Office for Simulation, Training and Instrumentation (PEO STRI) which has a program acquisition cost of $900million. Wilson was responsible for providing the U.S. Army integrated medical simulation capabilities to support the full Continuum of Medical Care throughout the world, (PMO built 30 Medical Simulations Centers with a throughput of 150,000 students annually). In 2012, the Defense Health Board studies documented a marked increase in lives saved in the battlefield, (over 1000 lives), due to the Medical Simulation training provided by the MEDSIM program.
Prior to joining PEO STRI, LTC Ariza was Chief of Readiness Branch, Office of The Surgeon General, Chief Information Office, Pentagon, Washington D.C. The CIO’s office has the responsibility to manage the Information Technology for 11 Major Subordinate Commands, 34 Army hospitals, 60,000 employees and a health care system supporting 1.3 million beneficiaries. In this capacity, he oversaw AMEDD policy, the U.S. Army’s Telehealth program in garrison settings and combat zones (18 time zones,30 countries, and over 30 clinical specialties), and Information Technology system development and integration for numerous Army and Department of Defense (DoD) programs.
Previous to that assignment, LTC Ariza was the Program Manager for Medical communications for Combat Casualty Care (MC4). LTC Ariza was responsible for successfully managing the deployment schedule, performance and maintenance procedures established for the MC4 program, which has a total program acquisition cost of $750 million. During this tenure at MC4, he was responsible for deploying the electronic medical record to the field during Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF). LTC Ariza was instrumental in deploying for first time in history of the Department of Defense a comprehensive, life-long electronic medical record for all Service Members forward deployed.
In 2006 LTC Ariza was selected as Manager of the Year in the Department of Defense and was awarded the Arthur S. Flemming Award at George Washington University. This award is given each year to outstanding Federal employees and are recognized by the President of the United States. Past winners include such luminaries as Neil Armstrong, Elizabeth Dole and Daniel Patrick Moynihan. LTC Ariza has twice been recognized by The Army Medical Department (AMEDD) for his role in advancing medical information technology in the U.S ARMY. The Army Medical Department named LTC Ariza Chief Information Officer of the Year in 2002, and in 2005 his team earned the Army Medical Information Systems/Information Management Team of the Year Award.
LTC Ariza’s past deployments include: Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), Operation Enduring Freedom-Afghanistan (OEF), Operation Joint Guard, Bosnia. A graduate of the U.S Army Command and General Staff College, (M.A in Leadership), LTC Ariza also holds Master’s degrees in Health Services Administration and Information Management from Webster University and is completing his PhD in Modeling & Simulation at the University of Central Florida. LTC Ariza is a Certified Professional in Information Technology Management and Project Management and a member of the Health Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS), The Society for Simulation in Healthcare (SSH), and The American Telemedicine Association (ATA).
Dr. Antonia Novello
Dr. Antonia Novello
When Dr. Antonia Novello was appointed Surgeon General of the United States by President George Bush in 1990, she was the first woman—and the first Hispanic—ever to hold that office. Her appointment came after nearly two decades of public service at the National Institutes of Health, where she took a role in drafting national legislation regarding organ transplantation.
Born Antonia Coello in Farjardo, Puerto Rico, she suffered throughout her childhood from a medical condition that could only be corrected with surgery. Because her family could not afford the long trip to the surgical hospital, she spent part of every summer getting interim treatment in a local hospital. It was only after two surgeries, at age 18 and 20, that the condition was finally corrected. In the meantime, by the time she was a teenager she had decided to be a doctor, so that she could help other sick children.
Dr. Novello earned her M.D. degree from the University of Puerto Rico. While in medical school, she met and married Joseph Novello, a U.S. Navy doctor. She later completed her medical training in nephrology (the study of the kidneys) at the University of Michigan, where she was first woman to be named Intern of the Year.
Novello gained experience in pediatrics in Michigan until 1974 and, after postgraduate work at Georgetown University and several years in private practice, she joined the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps in 1978, working with the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolism and Digestive Disorders at the National Institutes of Health. She became deputy director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, where she focused on pediatric AIDS.
Novello continued to work in pediatrics at Georgetown University Hospital and in 1982 earned her degree in public health from Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. On assignment with the U.S. Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, she helped draft legislation for the Organ Transplantation Procurement Act of 1984.
Through the prestige and authority of this office, the Surgeon General can more effectively exhort and educate the public on pervasive health issues. As surgeon general, Novello focused on the health of young people, women, and minorities. She issued reports and spoke out on under-age drinking, smoking, drug abuse AIDS (especially among women and adolescents), childhood immunization and injury prevention, and improved health care for Hispanics and other minorities.
One of her most visible and effective campaigns was against tobacco industry advertising aimed at children, especially evident in posters and billboard advertisements that featured the cartoon character “Joe Camel.”
Dr. Novello alerted the nation to the rising incidence of AIDS among women and adolescents. Her 1993 report on AIDS, while counseling against promiscuity and drug use, also included instructions on using condoms and cleaning intravenous needles.
During the Gulf War, Dr. Novello expedited the Federal Drug Administration approval of vaccines for military personnel, for which she was later awarded the Legion of Merit, a military honor, by General Colin Powell.
After serving as Surgeon General, Dr. Novello was a special representative to United Nations Children’s Fund from 1993-1996, where she expanded her efforts to address the health and nutritional needs of women, children, and adolescents, to a global scale. From 1996 to 1999 she was visiting professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins School of Health and Hygiene, where she advised on health services for poor communities. To mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1998, Novello organized an unprecedented meeting between Surgeon General David Satcher and seven others, besides herself, who had held the office. In 1999, Governor George Pataki nominated her to be commissioner of health for the state of New York, where she now heads one of the largest public health agencies in the country.
Our Team
Leslie Maas
Leslie Maas
Leslie Maas – Hurricane Hub Program Director
Leslie Maas Cortes served as Associate Director of CDC Funded Midwest Injury Control Research Center from 1998-2002.
Leslie Maas Cortes is the Director of the PR Hurricane Response Hub and Program Director at the Puerto Rico Public Health Trust. She is the founder of Proyecto Agua Limpia. Leslie earned her graduate degree at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in the area of Social Factors in Health and focused her research work on diabetes and obesity prevention in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Leslie has contributed to the scientific literature through several publications, and topics of interest are mortality studies, social determinants of health, injury control and prevention, and water safety and security. She is married, has two children and resides in Puerto Rico and Wisconsin.
Dr. Martin Montoya
Dr. Martin Montoya
Dr. Martin Montoya – Operations Director
Dr. Martín Montoya-Zavala, Operations Director of the Puerto Rico Public Health Trust. A published scientist at Harvard’s Wyss Institute, Boston’s Children Hospital, various biotechnology startups and Merck Research Laboratories. For the last four years, he managed operations in the Molecular Sciences Research Center at the University of Puerto Rico. He holds a bachelor’s in chemistry from the University of Puerto Rico in Mayagüez and a Doctorate in Biochemistry from the University of Virginia.
He is experienced in operations management, research and development and consulting for academia, biotechnology and Pharmaceutical companies. He was also a manager at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, a premiere center for translational research in the world.
Lupe Vázquez
Lupe Vázquez
Lupe Vázquez – Communications Director
Mrs. Vázquez is the Chief Marketing & Communications Officer of the Trust. She has 30 years of experience as editor and reporter at El Nuevo Día. Her experience includes managing writers, designers and freelance teams, in a variety of news beats, such as lifestyle, business, education and travel, in sections such as “Por Dentro, Fashionista, De Vinos, DeViaje, El Nuevo Día Educador, Logón, El Nuevo Día Domingo, Negocios and Revista Negocios”. Capable of leading redesign and change of scope in print and web platforms, she has launched and conceptualized new editorial print & digital products, responsibilities included branding, associating with sales department, development and execution of initiatives to increase readers and income models. Won the 2012 WAN-IFRA Young Readers Making the News Award with the transition of Logon, El Nuevo Día’s teen print. Has a Bachelor in Liberal Arts and MA in Translation, from the UPR.
Sara E Miller
Sara Miller
Sara Miller – Public Health Consultant
Sara Miller serves as the Public Health Advisor for the Puerto Rico Public Health Trust. Before joining the Puerto Rico Public Health Trust, in 2018, Ms. Miller served 10 years as the CEO of Trailhead Institute, one of Colorado’s public health institutes. Ms Miller has also held leadership positions in state and local government, non profit, and private organizations.
Ms Miller has led efforts over her career to plan, enhance, and implement of public health related programmatic and surveillance activities and strategies. Her particular expertise is focused on identification of fiscal and administrative challenges and generating solutions for both community-based organizations and large governmental organizations. She also has extensive knowledge in the development of organizational goals and strategic plans, working with multiple partner organizations, and development of actions to increase and maintain momentum in activities and programs. Ms. Miller has spearheaded training and capacity building, public and professional education, and the partnership and development of community led projects.
She owns a private consulting firm, the Otowi Group, which works with government, private and non-profit organizations in the areas of strategic planning, facilitation, program development, program evaluation and resource development. She holds a faculty appointment with the Colorado School of Public Health where she teaches Public Health Administration.
Dr. José Rodríguez Orengo
Dr. José F. Rodríguez
Dr. José F. Rodríguez
Elizabeth Vale
Elizabeth Vale
Director Of Communications at Puerto Rico Public Health Trust
Experienced Development Officer with a demonstrated history of working in the executive office industry. Skilled in Marketing Management, Market Planning, Integrated Marketing, International Business, and Team Building. Strong marketing professional with a Bachelor’s degree focused in Business/Corporate Communications from University of Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras.
Camelia Jiménez
Camelia Jiménez
Camelia Jiménez – Human Resources Director
Camelia Jiménez Díaz is the Human Resources Director of Puerto Rico Science, Technology & Research Trust. She joined the Trust on April 2018. Ms. Jimenez holds a Master Degree in Personnel Administration and Employee Relations from the University of Puerto Rico. She is a Compensation and Benefits Specialist and Certified Mediator. As a HR Director, she focus her effort in delivering quality service through the different components of the Human Resources Department.
Before joining the Trust, Ms. Jiménez had the opportunity of working in different industries, such as Technology, Healthcare, Insurance and Construction. She worked as Human Resources Manager at Immediata Health Group and was responsible for overall administration and management of the HR department. She worked for several years as an Employee Relations Department Manager of Medical Card System. She taught several courses at the Recinto Universitario de Bayamón, Universidad de Puerto Rico. As a HR Consultant, partnered with senior management across small and medium-sized business several strategies to improve performance and labor compliance.
Maribel Pagán
Maribel Pagán
Maribel Pagán- Administrative Assistant
Ms. Pagán is the Office Manager of the Trust since 2012. She provides key support in the administrative area, as well as assisting our CEO, Lucy Crespo and COO Ivan Ríos. Ms. Pagán has over 10 years involved in administrative functions and is a committed executive. Her knowledge, efforts and multiple skills help everyone on the PRSTRT achieve endeavor. She has a Bachelor’s Degree in Industrial Psychology as well as coursework in Human Resources and Industrial Relations.
Donate
Thank you for considering donating funds to the Puerto Rico Public Health Trust. Your donation will help us further our vision and mission.
Get Involved!
Resources
Recursos
EL TROTAMUNDOS LEYENDO CON PRPHT
El Puerto Rico Public Health Trust (PRPHT) comenzó una iniciativa de lecturas del libro “El día en que todo se movió” con el personaje infantil El Trotamundos. El propósito es que los niños entiendan de una manera sencilla lo que es un Terremoto.
Libro.
Un cuento realizado para explicarle a los niños de una manera sencilla lo que es un Terremoto.
Libro de actividades.
Este libro de actividades en un complemento del libro original para que los niños se distraigan y puedan expresar y liberar sus sentimientos ante la eventualidad.
Resiliencia Emocional
KIT DE HERRAMIENTAS PARA INVOLUCRAR TU COMUNIDAD.
Libro: Actividad Gérmenes en Español
Libro de Actividades Achú COVID-19
Diviértete Saludable
Diviértete Saludable
[advanced_iframe src=”https://prsciencetrust.org/DivierteteSaludable” width=”600px” height=”780px”]
News Blog
Llega el Fideicomiso de Salud Pública con sus libros que sanan a la Escuela Cruz María Gómez de Malavé en Añasco
Wendy Rivera2025-01-22T14:00:01-04:00enero 22nd, 2025|
Esta iniciativa tuvo como objetivo brindar herramientas para trabajar de manera divertida y creativa con las emociones de los niños ante las amenazas de huracanes y la violencia intracomunitaria.
Resumen 2024 de los Seminarios sobre los Determinantes Sociales de la Salud
Wendy Rivera2025-01-15T09:20:09-04:00enero 14th, 2025|
Durante el 2024 creamos una serie de seminarios organizados por el Grupo de Interés en Determinantes Sociales de la Salud y la Equidad en Salud. Estos encuentros virtuales tuvieron como objetivo educar sobre los factores sociales que impactan nuestra salud, fomentar colaboraciones multidisciplinarias y proponer soluciones a los problemas sociales y de salud que afectan a las comunidades puertorriqueñas. A continuación un breve resumen de los temas y logros de este año y los planes para 2025.
Proyecto de Aprendizaje a través de la Telementoría: Principales Avances en 2024
Wendy Rivera2025-01-15T09:45:06-04:00enero 10th, 2025|
En 2024, el Proyecto de Aprendizaje a través de la Telementoría de la División de Salud Ambiental logró importantes avances en la formación de profesionales de la salud en Puerto Rico. A través de conferencias, programas educativos y el Proyecto ECHO, se ofrecieron valiosas herramientas para mejorar el acceso a la atención médica y la capacitación continua.
Anón Carmelita en Ponce celebra la Salud y la Tradición con “Tu Salud es mi Parranda”
Wendy Rivera2024-12-23T09:52:55-04:00diciembre 23rd, 2024|
El Fideicomiso de Salud Pública (PRPHT, por sus siglas en inglés), un programa del Fideicomiso para Ciencia, Tecnología e Investigación de Puerto Rico continúa llevando su mensaje de esperanza y bienestar a las comunidades del archipiélago con la campaña “Tu Salud es mi Parranda”. En esta ocasión, el evento llegó a la comunidad Anón Carmelita en Ponce, con un programa lleno de alegría, salud emocional, y momentos de conexión intergeneracional.
Contact/ Contacto
Puerto Rico Science, Technology & Research Trust
PO Box 363475
San Juan, Puerto Rico 00936-3475
105 Carr. #21, Km. 0.8 Bo. Monacillo
San Juan, PR 00927
Elizabeth Vale Rivera, MBA
Directora de Comunicaciones
(Communications Manager)
Cel: 787-691-3463
Tel: 787-523-5651
Dr. Martín Montoya
Director de Operaciones
(Operations Director)
Cel: 787-469-7926
Tel: 787-523-5651