Dr. Katie Lohmiller and her sister Halley Gruber teamed up with local schools to develop a scientifically-based program that helps teachers better interact with both students and each other.
A lack of research on transgender and nonbinary (TNB) health needs and narrow definitions of women's and men's health often result in TNB individuals facing gender-based discrimination or having difficulty obtaining health services.
ColoradoSPH at UNC teamed up with the City of Greeley to host a community forum highlighting local Latinx-serving health organizations. The night was a case study in resilience as it morphed into a conversation about engaging non-dominant communities.
Spero Manson, Distinguished Professor and Director of the Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health, has been awarded the Carl Taube Award by the Mental Health Section of APHA.
MPH alum Reese Garcia is the Research Advocacy Manager for Fight Colorectal Cancer, a position where she empowers patients and families to take an active role in studying causes and treatments of the disease.
The Rocky Mountain Prevention Research Center at ColoradoSPH has received $3.7 million from the CDC to address intergenerational transmission of adverse childhood experiences in the San Luis Valley.
Beginning with the 2019-2020 application cycle, ColoradoSPH is eliminating the GRE as an admissions requirement for the MPH and DrPH graduate programs in an effort to recruit the most diverse student body possible.
The Center for Public Health Practice's Youth Project Manager talks power, it's relationship to tobacco use, and how to engage young people in social action programs that empower them to change their worlds.
Initially, the Rocky Mountain Prevention Research Center was largely focused on physical health, particularly obesity and type 2 diabetes, but over the last 20 years that focus has expanded to a much broader definition of health that includes mental and emotional well-being, as well as physical health.
ColoradoSPH program director signs on in agreement that individuals with mental health and substance use concerns need access to earlier support and care, rather than criminalization and punishment.
One of the largest-ever studies of work-related risks in young adult cancer survivors finds many experience professional and financial hardship or even bankruptcy, as a direct result of illness or treatment.
ColoradoSPH at Colorado State University professor Manfred Diehl has received the 2018 Distinguished Mentorship in Gerontology Award from the Gerontological Society of America.
African-American/black infants in Colorado are two-and-a-half times more likely to die before their first birthday than white infants. The number frames two complicated questions: why the disparity and how to eliminate it?
Since coming under the aegis of ColoradoSPH at the school’s creation in 2008, the Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health have further cemented the role of telehealth in the care of veterans nationally, and in expanding mental health services for remote tribal areas reporting high levels of substance use and trauma.