Title 42 › Chapter 6A— PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter I— ADMINISTRATION AND MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS › Part A— Administration › § 207
Sets which ranks and job titles officers in the Public Health Service get and how many of each rank can serve. The Surgeon General has the same rank as the Army Surgeon General while serving. The Deputy Surgeon General and the Coast Guard Chief Medical Officer have the rank that matches major general while assigned. The Chief Dental Officer gets the rank the law gives to the Army Dental Corps officer who is an Assistant Surgeon General. An officer serving as Assistant Secretary for Health has the rank that matches General of the Army. Assistant Surgeons General may be ranked like a brigadier general or a major general as the Secretary decides, but no more than one-half of the Assistant Surgeon General positions created under section 206 may be at the higher rank. Grades in the corps match Army grades: director = colonel; senior = lieutenant colonel; full = major; senior assistant = captain; assistant = first lieutenant; junior assistant = second lieutenant; chief warrant officers W–4, W–3, W–2 keep those W–titles; and W–1 is warrant officer (W–1). Medical officer job titles match those grades as medical director, senior surgeon, surgeon, senior assistant surgeon, assistant surgeon, and junior assistant surgeon. The President can set titles for other officers. Ready Reserve officers add the word “Reserve” to their titles. Each year, within the total number allowed by the appropriation Acts, the Secretary must set maximum numbers for each grade after considering needs, funds, current officers, expected hires, promotions, and retirements. Those limits cannot exceed appropriation limits, are set after the appropriation Act, and only change if authorized strength or limits change. The limits will not force officers out or cut their rank. Up to three officers counted at brigadier- or major-general level may be excluded from those limits while serving in policymaking jobs for the Department of Defense. Officers assigned to the Department of Defense may also be excluded when counting how many are serving on active duty.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 207
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60