Dr. Helen Arteaga is the City of New York’s deputy mayor for health and human services. She was appointed to this position by Mayor Zohran Mamdani in January 2026. The deputy mayor oversees and coordinates operations of the Health + Hospitals Corporation, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the Department of Social Services, the Human Resources Administration, the Department of Homeless Services, the Administration for Children’s Services, the Department of Youth and Community Development, the Department for the Aging, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, the Office to End Domestic and Gender Based Violence, the Department of Veterans’ Services, the Office of Community Mental Health, the Office of Food Policy, and the Office for People with Disabilities. Her work focuses on strengthening the city’s safety net, advancing health equity, and ensuring that every New Yorker, regardless of background or circumstance, has access to essential care and support.
In 2021, Helen became the first woman and the first Latina to serve as CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst, a Level 1 Trauma Center and one of the largest and most diverse public hospitals in New York City. Before becoming CEO, she played a critical leadership role during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Elmhurst Hospital became the epicenter of the global crisis in the United States. During this unprecedented moment, Helen helped guide the hospital through the most challenging period in its history, coordinating emergency response efforts, supporting frontline healthcare workers, and ensuring that the hospital continued to deliver lifesaving care to one of the most diverse patient populations in the country.
Under Helen’s leadership as CEO, Elmhurst strengthened its reputation as a leading safety-net hospital serving immigrant and working-class communities across Queens and New York City. The hospital was recognized as one of the “Best Regional Hospitals” and a “High Performing” hospital by U.S. News & World Report and named a “Top Place to Work” by City & State NY. During her tenure, Helen secured significant public investment to modernize and expand the hospital’s infrastructure, including $27.5 million from New York State for a new Women’s Pavilion and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, and nearly $140 million in federal, state, and city funding for major capital improvements to enhance patient care and strengthen the facility’s long-term capacity
Prior to her role at Elmhurst, Helen served as assistant vice president of the Queens Network and Executive Initiatives at Urban Health Plan, a network of New York City-based community health centers. Her passion for healthcare traces back to her family’s earliest years in the United States, when they arrived from Ecuador and struggled to access essential medical services. Those formative experiences and the enduring influence of her father’s community activism shaped her commitment to expanding care for immigrant and underserved communities. Years later, she led the creation of Plaza del Sol Family Health Center in Corona, Queens. Today, this vital institution delivers care to tens of thousands of residents each year, embodying her lifelong dedication to expanding access and equity in community health.
Helen has a bachelor’s degree from New York University, a master’s of public health from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. from the City University of New York. In 2025, she was named as one of City & State’s Queens Power 100. She was also featured as one of Becker’s Hospital Review’s “Women Hospital Presidents and CEOs to Know” for both 2024 and 2025. Helen is a recipient of the prestigious Joan H. Tisch Community Health Prize from the Laurie M. Tisch Illumination Fund for her distinguished accomplishments in the field of urban public health, the Mujeres Destacadas award from El Diario NY, the City University of New York’s “50 Under 50” alumni award, and a notable alumni award from CUNY’s School of Public Health. She continues to drive an ambitious agenda to strengthen the City’s public hospitals, expand community-based care, and fortify the social-service systems
that millions of New Yorkers rely on every day. With a clear vision and unwavering resolve, she is advancing reforms that prioritize equity, dignity, and access, ensuring that every New Yorker has the support they need to thrive. Her leadership reflects a deep belief in the power of public institutions and a steadfast commitment to building a healthier, fairer, and more affordable New York for all.