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What is an accountable care organization (ACO), and how does it work? How is care coordination being used as a tool to reduce costs in Colorado?
Before you gulp down six-plus cups of coffee in order to live longer, remember that causal relationships are often not so simple.
Americans now walk the least of any industrialized nation, yet we are hearing more about workplace wellness. Where do the two intersect?
What do physicians find most satisfying about their life and work in rural Colorado? A mix of personal factors and professional pride.
As a part of our tenth anniversary celebration, CHI will be offering 10 free webinars throughout 2012.
Last Sunday, The New York Times reported on an outbreak of pertussis – otherwise known as whopping cough –in Washington state. Public health and state officials have declared an epidemic – with 10 times more diagnosed cases than last year and an incident rate that is closing in on rates encountered in the 1940s.
Findings based on a survey of Colorado’s rural physicians provides a snapshot of these important health care providers, including why they practice in rural Colorado, what keeps them working in their communities and the demands placed on their practices.
Nearly 40 percent of Coloradans lacked dental insurance coverage in 2011, up from 37 percent in 2008-2009.
The difficulties in the last days of the session should not detract from the hard work and the successful efforts to create innovative solutions to improve health services in Colorado.
In Colorado, we often refer to the importance of geographic and demographic variation within our state. However, when we discuss how Colorado performs as a state with respect to health indicators and risk factors, we sometimes miss this variation.