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​Bureau of Family Health

The mission of the BFH is to equally protect and equitably promote the health and well-being of pregnant people, their partners, their children and all families in Pennsylvania.

The divisions under BFH include: Child and Adult Health Services, Community Systems Development and Outreach, Newborn Screening and Genetics and Bureau Operations.  BFH administers Pennsylvania’s Title V Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant.

Information for Families During the Formula Shortage

Division of Child and Adult Health Services 

The goal of the Division of Child and Adult Health Services (DCAHS) is to provide proven and effective services to improve health outcomes and support people at increased risk from birth through adulthood.  DCAHS aims to improve health equity, address social determinants of health, reduce infant death, and improve child and teen health.  Programs to address these goals include:

  • Providing services to reduce lead hazards in homes where pregnant women and children under the age of six live;
  • Providing help to prevent and lower lead exposure and lead poisoning in children under the age of six;
  • Preventing and lowering infant and child injuries or deaths through proven strategies;
  • Preventing Sudden Unexpected Infant Death due to unsafe sleep environments;
  • Providing services for teens to prepare for adulthood, including access to family planning services, preventing teen relationship abuse, developing protective factors, and providing emotional and mental health support;
  • Providing medical, prescription, and transportation services to eligible adults with end stage renal disease through the Chronic Renal Disease Program.  

Division of Community Systems Development and Outreach

The mission of the Division of Community Systems Development and Outreach (CSDO) is to provide statewide leadership, in partnership with key stakeholders and families/caregivers, to create system changes at the state and local level to improve health and health related outcomes for individuals and families, including those with special health care needs.

CSDO meets this mission by:

  • Ensuring families and caregivers serve as partners in the care and improvement of care of their children with special health care needs.
  • Linking families with information and resources through the Special Kids Network Helpline, the Community to Home program and through partnership with the Parent Education and Advocacy Leadership Center (PEAL).
  • Providing direct services for individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) through the Head Injury Program and Acquired Brain Injury Program.
  • Assisting children and youth with TBI to integrate back into a school setting through the BrainSTEPS program.
  • Connecting individuals with TBI to services and supports through the NeuroResource Facilitation Program.
  • Providing education and outreach to populations that work with individuals with TBI such as juvenile justice, the aging population, and opioid use programs.
  • Providing education to adolescent males to increase positive relationship behaviors through the use of the Coaching Boys into Men curriculum.
  • Providing training and education for individuals and the community related to epilepsy through the Epilepsy Program.
  • Providing services through the Specialty Care Program (SCP) for individuals diagnosed with Cooley's Anemia (beta thalassemia), cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, spina bifida, and sickle cell disease (SCD).
  • Providing the Sickle Cell Community-Based Services and Supports Program (CBSS), which partners with care systems to support families and communities, improve health outcomes and increase the quality of life for those living with SCD.
  • Providing early diagnostic services and support for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder through the Autism Diagnostic Clinic and Applied Behavioral Analysis Parent Coaching program.
  • Partnering with the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers (PACHC) on the Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) Program to improve health system function for children and youth with special health care needs receiving care at FQHCs.

Division of Newborn Screening and Genetics Division of Newborn Screening and Genetics

The mission of the Division of Newborn Screening and Genetics (DNSG) is to ensure every child born in Pennsylvania receives a dried blood spot screening, a hearing screening, and a critical congenital heart defects screening through the Newborn Screening Program and the Newborn Hearing Screening and Intervention Program.  The DNSG also oversees the Department of Health's Breastfeeding Program, which is focused on increasing the number of new mothers who choose to breastfeed and increasing the length of time mothers breastfeed. DNSG initiatives include:

  • Providing follow-up services to ensure newborns receive the three newborn screens and that newborns with an abnormal result receive timely referrals, diagnoses, and treatment.
  • Providing formula to eligible individuals through the Metabolic Formula Program.
  • Convening and supporting the Newborn Screening and Follow-up Technical Advisory Board and the Infant Hearing Screening Advisory Committee which advises and makes recommendations to the Department on program regulation and administration, diagnostic testing, and technical support.
  • Providing breastfeeding education and support to new mothers and supporting the Keystone 10 breastfeeding initiative.  

Division of Bureau Operations

The mission of the Division of Bureau Operations (DBO) is to ensure the Bureau of Family Health and its partners have the capacity, expertise and resources needed to design, implement and evaluate public health programming that is evidence-based, family-driven, shaped by an awareness of the social, economic and environmental determinants of health, and sensitive to the unique needs of the populations served by the Bureau.

DBO provides support to Bureau of Family Health staff by managing the reporting requirements of the Title V Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant (MCHSBG). DBO also provides leadership and technical support to the Bureau and grantees on client satisfaction, client engagement, cultural humility, data collection and analysis, evaluation and staff development.

Additionally, DBO manages several surveillance and grant programs including: Child Death Review (CDR); Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID) and Sudden Death in the Young (SDY) Case Registries; Pennsylvania Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PA PRAMS); Technology Assisted Children's Home Program (TACHP) and State Systems Development Initiative (SSDI). 

Bureau of Family Health Publications

To order brochures, send an email to RA-DHBFHPublications@pa.gov. Please include the title(s) you wish to order, the number needed, the mailing address, and contact name/phone number. To download a brochure for use, please click on the title and save to your computer.

The following publications are for download only:

The following publications can be ordered or downloaded, minimums may apply for print orders:

The following publications can only be ordered.

Division of Maternal Health Services

The mission of the Division of Maternal Health Services is to implement data-driven programs, initiatives and policies to support the health of individuals during the pregnancy, postpartum, and early parenting periods with the goal of reducing disparities and improving the health of women and birthing individuals in Pennsylvania. The division is broken into two sections Maternal Mortality Review Program and Pregnant, Parenting, and Family Services. Key initiatives to meet this goal include:

Maternal Mortality Review Program

  • Coordinating and administering the Maternal Mortality Review Committee to review all pregnancy-associated deaths, identify root causes of deaths, and develop recommendations to reduce preventable morbidity, mortality, and racial disparities related to pregnancy in Pennsylvania.

Pregnant, Parenting, and Family Services

  • Partnering with government agencies, state and local organizations to implement programs and policies to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity.
  • Implementing recommendations from the Maternal Mortality Review Committee through regional maternal health coalitions.
  • Partnering with community organizations to review maternal and infant data to inform programs and initiatives to improve birth outcomes.
  • Partnering with the County and Municipal Health Departments to provide health services at the local level to women, birthing individuals, children and families.
  • Working to increase accessibility of doula services. 

Contact Us

Bureau of Family Health
Health & Human Services Building
7th Floor East Wing
625 Forster Street
Harrisburg, PA  17120-0701
717-346-3000
717-772-0323 (fax)​
RA-DHPATITLEV@pa.gov