In The News

Congratulations to the 2017 Award Recipients! 

Award: Excellence in the Promotion of Health Equity (CPHA, COSOPHE, PHNAC)

Recipient: Olga Gonzalez

Org/Agency: LiveWell Colorado

Nominated By: Leslie Levine

Nomination: Olga always approaches her work as a community member first. She is very aware of the barriers faced by people of color and those living in poverty, and she draws on her own professional and personal lived experience in her relationships with communities and approaches to the work that LiveWell does. It is extremely important to her that community voices are integrated into all of our work to reduce barriers to healthy eating and active living. As such, Olga has traveled throughout the state to personally meet with community members in urban and rural settings, as well as to Native American reservations. She is mindful of including both grasstops and grassroots representatives to gain a broader understanding of each community that she visits.

Olga is very values-driven and is always mindful of ensuring that our work is directly tied to our stated mission and vision. She challenges our staff to consider whether or not community needs and voices were considered in our programs, communications, and policy work. Olga also helps us to identify other partners and voices that should be included in our work. She guides us to understand the possible intended and unintended impact of our work on the communities that we serve. Most importantly, Olga encourages a culture of collaboration with community residents and partners and helps to identify opportunities where our staff can be more present in community settings so that we can all benefit from meeting people in their own spaces.


Award: Sabin Award 

Recipient: Julie George

Org/Agency: LiveWell Colorado

Nominated By: Leslie Levine

Nomination: Julie has distinct ability to create trusting, long-lasting relationships with elected officials and municipal staff, which is the basis of the success of LiveWell Colorado’s HEAL Cities & Towns Campaign. Although Julie hails from urban roots, she easily connects with and brings together leaders from all backgrounds. This was demonstrated at the 2016 Public Health in the Rockies Conference, where she brought the Mayor of Sheridan and the Mayor Pro Tem from Commerce City for a formal dialogue with public health professionals. This Q&A session offered attendees the opportunity to learn how best to communicate and work with elected officials in the realm of policy and systems change.

The fact that HEAL Cities & Towns is an initiative that truly reaches the four corners of the state with strong representation from rural, frontier, suburban, and urban communities is also attributable to Julie’s versatility. Julie’s focus while at CASB was working with rural education leaders, and she knows that sometimes extra effort is required to reach communities that often are overlooked. She has thus made it a priority to travel across the state, giving her a strong understanding of rural Colorado. Julie continues to seek out rural leaders and help them be the voice of the HEAL movement and showcase their expertise. When working with rural communities, Julie doesn’t push an urban/suburban approach. Rather, she learns about the needs and challenges of the community and how LiveWell, as a Denver-based statewide organization, can lift their voice and connect them to resources.


Award: Award for Technical Innovation in Public Health

Recipient: Rocky Mountain Public Health Training Center

Nominated By: Alice White

Nomination: The Rocky Mountain Public Health Training Center (RM-PHTC) is leading the way in the development of peer learning opportunities for the public health workforce.  Using bi-directional video technology, the RM-PHTC connects people across Colorado, in tribal communities, and neighboring states in real time to learn from each other without leaving their communities.  The RM-PHTC increases access while also reducing financial and personnel cost. Connecting professionals to experts and to each other is critical for reducing professional isolation and for maintaining a highly trained public health workforce.

Since January 2015, the RM-PHTC has trained 12,905 professionals from 49 counties across Colorado. on topics such as: Advocacy, Cancer Control, Behavioral Health Integration, Evidence-Based Public Health, Community Organizing, Health Equity, Grants Management, Foodborne Illness Outbreak Investigation & Response, QI & Accreditation, Storytelling and Strategic Planning.

In the words of Colorado’s public health community:

"The RM-PHTC is the primary workforce development resource for public health in Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region. We rely on them to train our staff as well as the public health workforce across Colorado.”

"The training center helps me stay current in my field. It is an affordable way to access training and keep learning so I can be sure that I'm evolving as a public health professional."


Award: Roy Cleere Distinguished Service Award

Recipient: Stacy Weinberg

Org/Agency: TCHD

Nominated By: Laurie Schneider

Nomination: After finishing a Master’s degree in Health Communications from Stanford, this nominee made a road trip back to the East Coast. We are all fortunate that her route took her through Colorado where she decided to make her home, raise her daughters and commit her career to social justice and improving health.

Stacy Weinberg serves as the Director of Epidemiology, Planning and Communication at TCHD.  She has played a key role in shepherding many large public health innovations over the past two decades. She oversaw the implementation of the Communities Putting Prevention to Work grant which revolutionized the way public health work is approached at TCHD. She served on the statewide Public Health Improvement Steering Committee which instituted the Public Health Improvement Act. Her team provides leadership for the Regional SIM grant, the Regional Infrastructure and Health Equity Work Groups. Stacy created a team which has led TCHD through Public Health Accreditation and develops and implements innovations in Informatics, Performance Management and QI, Community Health Assessment and the Public Health Improvement Plan. Stacy has collaborated on the Regional Sugar Sweetened Beverage Campaign and the Make it OK Mental Health Campaign. Stacy is a bold and innovative leader and does not shy away from the challenges presented by the ever changing landscape of public health practice.  

Stacy, we are grateful that the road led you here.  You have paved the way for innovative public health work in the state and continue to inspire others with your positive spirit, determination, and hope.


Award: Public Health CHAMP Award

Recipient: Brendan Doyle

Org/Agency: Denver Environmental Health

Nominated By: BOTH Donna Hite and Steven Chevalier

Nomination: Tri-County Health Department’s (TCHD) Industrial Hygienist retired in April 2017 and she was the only person certified to conduct home visits for children with elevated blood lead levels (EBLL).  TCHD was concerned about a number of children in our jurisdiction with high BLLs needing a home visit to identify the source of lead poisoning.  We reached out to Mr. Brendan Doyle from the City and County of Denver Public Health Inspections Division, Department of Environmental Health and asked if he could possibly find the time to conduct some home visits helping us to identify the source of lead poisoning so we could work with the families to mitigate the problem.  Despite Mr. Doyle’s busy workload, and the fact that TCHD could not offer any reciprocal programmatic financial compensation for his time and efforts, he readily agreed. Mr. Doyle has offered to assist TCHD with 5 (and plans to do more) home visits, conducting interviews with the families, measuring potential sources for lead with the x-ray fluorescence device, conducting swab tests, and also collecting samples for laboratory analysis.  This shows a strong public health commitment on his part to protecting and serving children and families even outside of his jurisdiction.  Brendan Doyle is true public health servant. TCHD is proud to have him as a partner in our community and would like to recognize him for his efforts.

Brendan is an Environmental Health Analyst with the City and County of Denver and manages the City’s Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and is an Environmental Protection Agency-certified Lead Risk Assessor. Prior to his work at the City and County of Denver, he managed a Housing and Urban Development Lead Hazard Control grant through a local community-based organization. Brendan is a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer and has spent several years in Paraguay and Peru working to address environmental health challenges at local levels. He received his Master’s Degree in Public Administration and Environmental Management from the University of Colorado.


Award: Award for Excellence in Policy

Recipient: Rachel Arndt, Jeff Zayach, Susan Motika, Summer Laws, Tessa Hale, and Amelia Hulbert

Org/Agency: Boulder County Public Health

Nominated By: Jennifer Moreland

Nomination: Boulder County Public Health’s (BCPH) significant policy achievements of the second voter approved sugary drink tax in the US and the nation’s first non-acceptance of sugary drink funds is speaks loudly to their steadfast focus on advancing health equity. During the campaign they creatively problem solved to shift staff responsibilities and funding streams to ensure staff was legally allowed to work on the tax initiative. Post-passage they continued their support to retailers, the public, and ensured academic evaluation of the tax outcomes on health. Boulder is modeling effective policy strategy implementation to respond to their Public Health Improvement Plan goals of reducing childhood obesity. Their commitment to health equity, passion to serve, use of data to drive policy action and implementation of evidence-based strategies is a road map for all health agencies to follow. The entire agency is worthy of this effort, and I would like to specifically acknowledge the work of Jeff Zayach, Susan Motika, Summer Laws, Rachel Arndt, Tessa Hale, and Amelia Hulbert.  

The CDC released Public Health 3.0: with the perspective that “increasingly, our job in PH is influencing without authority, working with organizations that we don’t control or fund, to align what they do with the health of the public.” BCPH under Jeff’s leadership with support from the individuals mentioned exemplified this in passing the SSB Tax.


Award: Emerging Leader in Public Health Award 

Recipient: Gwendolyn West

Org/Agency: Equitas

Nominated By: Kim Boyd

Nomination: Gwendolyn is definitely one to watch in our public health community!  Her contributions to the public health community through her service on the CPHA Board as the Communications Director have been nothing short of astounding.  Our Colorado public health community has benefited greatly from her gifts in communications and marketing.  As a result of her talents, CPHA members have been more informed this year on issues, opportunities, and the work of fellow public health professionals in Colorado.  As the Affiliate Representative to the Governing Council of APHA, I have relied heavily on Gwendolyn as we have been more responsive to the rapidly changing national events and policy changes.  Gwendolyn has spent late nights, early mornings, and weekends helping me and the rest of the Executive Board craft messages to send to the CPHA members regarding issues such as engagement for advocacy in opposition of the Affordable Care Act and preservation of the Prevention and Public Health Fund, and official public statements in response to changing immigration policy, racism and violence.   Finally, Gwendolyn's work as a Program Manager at Equitas Foundation is meeting a unique need in our Colorado public health community as she strives to untangle the messy intersection of health, mental health and the criminal justice system to better serve the most vulnerable among us.  Gwendolyn is a tremendous asset to the Colorado public health community.  If you don't know her, you should!


Award: Lifetime Achievement Award

Recipient: Dr. Richard Vogt

Org/Agency: TCHD, Retired

Nominated By: Patty Boyd

Nomination: I first met Dr. Vogt in 2010 when he was Executive Director of Tri-County Health Department.  Although Dr. Vogt retired from Tri-County Health Department in 2013, he is not totally “retired” from public health. As with many successful retirees, he continues to share his expertise nationally and internationally as a short-term consultant for CDC.

Dr. Vogt trained in family practice at the University of Colorado and then as an epidemiologist. And as any good “bug Sherlock Holmes” - he discovered that Campylobacter disease could be transmitted via contaminated water and that Legionnaire's Disease could be contracted from contaminated whirlpool spas.

His participation in the polio eradication effort in Egypt got him introduced to the Saudi Arabia Epidemiology Director by a support staff person announcing his arrival as “the one who spoke Egyptian" for two years.  Everybody in the room cracked up and only later did he learn about the joke.  Dialects even occur in Arabic countries.

He has held multiple leadership roles with national organizations and currently serves on the NACCHO Infectious Disease Prevention and Control workgroup and is a Board Trustee for the Foundation for the Public’s Health.

Thank you Dr. Vogt you have invested a lifetime in public health!


Award: John Muth Award

Recipient: Adam Anderson

Org/Agency: Tri-County Health Department

Nominated By: Meghan Prentiss, Alyson Shupe, and the CPHA Board

Nomination: Adam has made significant contributions while juggling a variety of projects all at once, like increasing the visibility of CPHA’s activities through the newsletter, Outside Events, collaborative events like the webinar and PHiR planning, all while maintaining a network of partners that extends into CPHA’s work.

In his contribution on the board in Membership, Communications and conference committees, we can see he has a bold and broad scope of the roles CPHA and his membership role play in the non-profit and public health landscapes.  This has worked with the communications director to totally re-envision CPHA communications, from the newsletter and other email, to fliers, brochures, and forms, in a way that will be effective and has demonstrated increased engagement, buzz, and buy-in from members and prospective members. Specifically, Adam should be commended for both his ability to think about how to create a Colorado Public Health community with the association as a hub by expanding the way we share stories and updates on agencies, programs, and people in the state. By sharing his design sensibilities with CPHA, Adam has also raised the bar by bringing in his artistic prowess and design technique to our correspondence.

Overall, Adam has been enthusiastic, supportive, and has undoubtedly made a significant contribution to CPHA and the public health community.


Award: General Recognition Award

Recipient: Lisa Raville

Org/Agency: Harm Reduction Action Center

Nominated By: Whit Oyler

Nomination: Lisa is the rare person that effectively incorporates a burning passion for public health with an evidence based approach. Lisa also has a remarkable ability to build bridges with unlikely partners. She has worked with law enforcement to ensure police and sheriff deputies in in counties across the state know what naloxone is, how to use it, and carry it. She is a public health hero in Colorado.

 

New Report from Colorado Health Institute on Connection Between Climate Change and Health in Colorado

Posted on July 10, 2017 

The Colorado Health Institute (CHI) today released a research brief that identifies the Coloradans most at risk of adverse health outcomes related to climate change.

Titled “Colorado’s Climate and Colorado’s Health: Examining the Connection,” the paper finds that rising temperatures, polluted air and wildfires are the climate change results expected to most affect the health of Coloradans.

The new report marks the first research by CHI, an independent and nonpartisan health policy research institute, into the impact of climate change on health. It was prompted by the growing body of scientific research connecting the two. 

A great deal of work is being done at the intersection of climate change and health. The American Public Health Association, for instance, has designated 2017 the year of climate change and health, calling climate change the nation’s greatest public health challenge.

Colorado’s children, seniors and people with lung or heart disease are especially at risk, the CHI paper reports.

Some of the findings, by category:

Rising temperatures.

Colorado’s average temperature has increased by two degrees Fahrenheit in the past 30 years, significantly outpacing historical trends. Extreme heat affects cardiovascular, respiratory and nervous systems. Coloradans who will be most impacted:

  • Almost six percent of Colorado’s adults have cardiovascular disease, putting them at an increased risk for heat exhaustion and heat stroke.
  • The state’s 1.2 million children are especially vulnerable. Children absorb more heat than adults because they have a greater ratio of skin surface to weight.
  • The 711,000 seniors over age 65 are at increased risk because chronic illness and age can hinder their ability to regulate body temperature.
  • The seven percent of Colorado’s adults with diabetes can have trouble cooling their bodies on hot days, a result of damage to blood vessels and nerves that impact sweat glands.

Air quality.

Changes in weather patterns — even slight modifications of wind, temperature, humidity or cloud level — increase pollutants such as ozone, carbon dioxide and particulate matter, which in turn impact overall air quality. Health implications include breathing problems and extended allergy seasons. Coloradans who will be most impacted:

  • Seniors with bronchitis or emphysema.
  • The 107,000 children with asthma.
  • The approximately 380,000 adults with asthma.
  • The 180,000 Colorado adults with respiratory ailments such as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD).
  • Coloradans who are prone to pollen and mold allergies.

Wildfires.

Climate and weather strongly influence the health of forests and the intensity and size of wildfires. Health implications include asthma attacks, coughing, chest pain, and eye and nose irritation. Vulnerable Coloradans include:

  • Coloradans who live in the wildland-urban interface areas, more than two million residents in 2012.
  • Coloradans with COPD, asthma, and lung cancer.
  • People with cardiovascular disease.

The study's primary authors are CHI analysts Chrissy Esposito and Maggie Bailey. 


For More Information

303.831.4200 or [email protected]

 

349 People Have Already Renewed! WHY HAVEN'T YOU?

If you haven't renewed as of August 1, 2018 your CPHA membership will lapse! Want to remain in good standing with CPHA? Renew your membership by clicking hereRenew today! Members receive reduced-price registration for Public Health in the Rockies.

 

 

Help CPHA With HB17-1306: Drinking Water Lead Testing At Public Schools

Posted: June 13, 2017

Meeting notice 

We are seeking input for the development of a grant program for lead testing at eligible public schools. We are holding meetings to inform and solicit feedback on the proposed rule, including the project prioritization system that will be used to distribute available funds. 

Please join our email list to receive updates. In the future, we will only send to those who have signed up on this list.   


Meeting details
When  
June 22, 2017 (2-4 p.m.)
June 28, 2017 (1-3 p.m.)
July 20, 2017 (1-3 p.m.) (to discuss the final proposal to the Water Quality Control Commission)

The first two webinars are the same information. The third and final webinar is when we will discuss the final proposal to the commission based on comments received. 

Meeting materials -  Materials to be discussed at the meeting are available on our website

Rulemaking hearing
The Colorado General Assembly passed legislation (HB17-1306) to establish a lead testing program to assist public schools with conducting lead testing within the school’s drinking water system. As a result, we are seeking stakeholder feedback and input for a lead testing in public schools grant program. Stakeholder input will be incorporated into a proposal for the Water Quality Control Commission. The commission will conduct a rulemaking hearing on November 13, 2017 to consider amendments to the existing rules of the Water Quality Improvement Fund (Regulation 55). The amendments to Regulation 55 will establish criteria for the award of grants to complete lead testing.

Questions?
If you have questions regarding the grant program, please contact:

Michael Beck
303-692-3374
[email protected]

Randi Johnson-Hufford
303-692-2203
[email protected]

 

Learn More About Public Health Finance!

Posted: June 7, 2017

 
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