Our Work
Many Coloradans were struggling with housing insecurity before COVID-19, and the sudden economic crash is likely to make things worse.
A Needs Assessment of Colorado’s Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Workforce
Memorial Day weekend is here. Can we save summer without sacrificing fall and winter?
After more than two months away, Colorado legislators are preparing to file back in after a hiatus necessitated by a global pandemic.
What is an Arveschoug-Bird? How do you clawback, exactly? And remember when people were uninsurable? Working to compile this sixth edition of HealthWords, we were reminded how much and how fast the world of health and health policy changes.
Root Causes, a new project developed by the Colorado Health Institute in collaboration with the Colorado Health Foundation connects data on mental health and complex social factors.
It’s too soon to talk about fully reopening the economy, but it’s exactly the right time to dream big about how to come back better than we were before.
As of today — Friday, May 8 — at least 945 Coloradans have died as a result of COVID-19. More than 500 of them were residents of nursing homes or senior living facilities. Some 18,370 people had been diagnosed with the disease, and experts suspect many more remain undiagnosed.