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This 2011 report predicts health care needs of the 500,000-plus Coloradans expected to become insured under federal health reform. The analysis includes the anticipated number of additional primary care physicians and other providers needed to deliver that medical care.
Mention Medicaid and there seems to be no shortage of concerns.
Earlier this month, Kaiser Health News and NPR reported that Walmart had issued a document seeking vendors and partners to help the company “build a national, integrated, low-cost primary care health care platform that will provide preventative and chronic care services that are currently out of reach for millions of Americans.”
When I began my professional career over a decade ago, I didn’t give a second thought to employer benefits, particularly health insurance.
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.
The second survey in the series and the first to bear the Colorado Health Access Survey name.
Spoiler alert: this blog is about data. Nonetheless, I hope you keep reading.