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This paper outlines promising and proven strategies that can help Coloradans make healthier choices, boosting fruit and veggie consumption statewide.
The yearly legislative session got under way Wednesday at the state Capitol, but based on the opening day’s rhetoric, health policy will not be a top priority in 2015.
With Republicans reclaiming the state Senate, Democrats no longer hold sway over the agenda at the Capitol. Legislators will need bipartisan coalitions to get anything done during the 2015 session, which starts today.
What’s on your plate? Among Coloradans, odds are there aren’t enough fruit and vegetables.
In 2013, more than 17 percent of uninsured Coloradans said they did not know how to get coverage – a three percentage point increase from 2009.
CHI-ers are welcoming 2015 in our own nerdy fun way – with (mostly) health-related predictions for Colorado in the New Year.
Have you been reading our weekly insights? In 2014, we ramped up our Insight effort to produce a weekly analysis of data that is either a topic of interest to the author or a data point that is timely in nature.
We often hear that people lack health insurance because it’s too expensive. But across the state, many uninsured residents say they don’t have insurance not because they can’t afford it, but because they simply don’t need it.
Monday was a long-awaited day for anyone tracking the Colorado Commission on Affordable Health Care, with the panel finally getting down to a debate over the substance of its mission.
The second Connect for Health Colorado open enrollment got underway on Saturday, November 15. So far, it has attracted less attention than last year — and that may be a good sign.