Our Work
The Colorado Health Institute delves into the newest estimates of uninsurance, both Colorado and across the nation, from three new surveys.
A look at the effects of historic changes in health access in the wake of state and federal reforms.
Releasing the findings from the 2015 Colorado Health Access Survey (CHAS) is our prime focus right now, so much that the team has begun dreaming about it.
I’m thinking of a number between zero and 14.3. Guess it, and you could win an Apple Watch.
March is Women’s History Month. This year’s theme is Make it Happen, and it is all about closing the gender gap. In order to close these gaps, we need to know where they are.
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.
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.
In some regions of Colorado, one of four people strongly disagree that the health care system meets the needs of their families.
The big question of the hour – not to mention the day, the month and the year – is how to encourage the hundreds of thousands of Coloradans who remain uninsured to sign up for health insurance during open enrollment beginning November 15.
Fifty years ago, the Beatles sang, “I don’t care too much for money, ‘cuz money can’t buy me love.” While that’s still true, it’s also true that in 2014, money can mean better health.