Our Work
Since distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines started, there’s been limited supply and competition to get vaccinated.
Gov. Jared Polis laid out an agenda for Colorado in his annual State of the State address that would be ambitious even if the COVID-19 pandemic were over.
Starting February 8, educators in Colorado will be eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Some school staff have already received vaccines. This is a significant step toward supporting the health of teachers and school communities.
Without explicit commitment to equity, we cannot operationalize it.
On the first day of the year, one of the most consequential health policy regulations of the last 10 years went into effect, and it went largely unnoticed.
The newest member of the CHI team explains the profound moment health policy became personal.
Biden said the words that other presidents have not. Some reflections on the inauguration from CHI.
In what feels like a never-ending marathon, we’re approaching the one-year mark of the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S.
The Colorado Health Institute (CHI) is proud to announce that Denver Public Health has officially recognized our office as a breastfeeding-friendly workplace.
In this historic week — when the U.S. has reached the grim milestone of 300,000 people dead from COVID-19 and the first frontline workers are vaccinated — CHI’s blog takes a turn away from the statistics and policy analysis to capture a human perspective.