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It's been only a few years since I strolled the halls of East High School, chatting with other students about various trivialities — soccer tryouts, our crushes and our weekend plans. But in every class, I remember taking standardized tests and surveys, providing my responses by filling in the entire circle as instructed, “completely and darkly with a No. 2 pencil.” As a summer intern at the Colorado Health Institute (CHI), I analyzed how Colorado’s high school students answered one of those very same surveys.
We hope everyone is enjoying the Olympics and possibly pondering which event they would compete in like these New York Times employees did. Tune in this week for a plethora of track and field events, as well as men’s gymnastics, beach volleyball and many others.
This week is also Safety-Net Clinic Week! To celebrate, the Colorado Health Institute (CHI) is publishing two reports.
Colorado voters were asked in November 2016 whether to adopt ColoradoCare, a revolutionary system to provide universal health coverage to all the state’s residents. CHI released a three-part series to analyze the proposal.
In late 2015, CHI released an updated study showing how the geography of health insurance has shifted in Colorado since implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
The Summer Olympics will kick off Friday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and it’s a historic time for the Games. This is the first time the Summer Olympic Games will be hosted in a South American city. Another historic element to this year’s Games is the presence of the spreading Zika virus.
Coloradans head to the polls in November to vote on Amendment 69, a constitutional amendment which would create a universal health care system called ColoradoCare.
A new analysis that we released Monday seeks to answer an important question: would its financial plan be viable over time?
The election cycle of 2016 will not be known as a season where fact ruled the day. On a near daily basis, we see episodes where ideology supersedes the facts. This is an election season of emotion and heart.
Residents of Colorado’s mountain counties have expressed alarm and anger at the dramatically higher insurance premiums they face compared with the rest of Colorado.
Nearly one in 10 Coloradans were unable to get a medical appointment because their preferred doctor was not accepting new patients.
The percentage of Coloradans who could not afford a prescription is at a six-year low, according to an analysis of Colorado Health Access Survey (CHAS) data.