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An overview of the Medicaid program in Colorado,the growth in enrollment and costs, and options to contain costs, including efforts underway in other states.
For the first time, Colorado has a three-year estimate of the number of Coloradans who don’t have health insurance.
It’s been almost exactly 15 years and I still remember that morning as if it were yesterday.
The U.S. Census Bureau has released 2008 and 2009 estimates of health insurance coverage for each of the roughly 3,140 counties in the United States.
In the flurry to study and understand all the parts and pieces of the federal health reform law, it is easy to lose sight of the original goals.
CHI estimates that federal health reform will result in more than 540,000 Coloradans (10 percent of the state’s population) becoming newly insured by 2014, leading to increased use of primary care services across the state.
Todd Park gets more excited about health data than just about anyone I know.
The second survey in the series and the first to bear the Colorado Health Access Survey name.
Investing in health technology holds the potential for significant improvement in the health care system, Michele Lueck, CHI’s CEO and president, says in this presentation.
Policy initiatives at the state and federal levels are being rolled out in order to increase health insurance coverage.