<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=799546403794687&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Blogs

Department of Medicine News and Stories

Press Coverage (2)

Press Coverage

No more needles? A daily pill may work as well as Wegovy shots to treat obesity

“If you ask people a random question, ‘Would you rather take a pill or an injection?’ People overwhelmingly prefer a pill,” said Daniel Bessesen, chief of endocrinology at Denver Health, who treats patients with obesity but was not involved in the new research.


Author ABC News | Publish Date June 25, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

When doctors sugarcoat the truth, patients get shortchanged

Too much information can be unhelpful and confusing, said Eric Campbell, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado and director of research at the CU Center for Bioethics and Humanities. But should a doctor decide that medical choices are over a patient’s head so they shouldn’t be mentioned or that a patient is too fragile to handle difficult news?


Author Washington Post | Publish Date June 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

UCHealth opens new tower, expands patient capacity

UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital on the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora opened a new tower this week which will boast 215 new inpatient beds when fully phased in.

“Our hospital is often at or near patient capacity,” Dr. Jean Kutner, UCH chief medical officer, said in a statement.

Kutner added, “The additional inpatient rooms and services in the new tower allow us to meet the needs of even more patients.”


Author Denver Gazette | Publish Date June 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Peer Groups Can Provide Emotional Support to Those With Kidney Failure

Lilia Cervantes, from University of Colorado in Aurora, and colleagues assessed the feasibility and acceptability of a single-group peer support group intervention for undocumented immigrants with kidney failure receiving emergency dialysis.


Author HealthDay | Publish Date June 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Starting Indicated Heart Failure Meds In-Hospital: Progress, Opportunities

Hess, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, is senior author on the report from the Get With The Guidelines-Heart Failure (GWTG-HF) quality improvement program of the American Heart Association. Lead author is Stanley A. Swat, MD, MSCS, from the same institution.


Author Medscape | Publish Date June 21, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Scientists uncover molecular mechanism contributing to defective heart development in Down syndrome

A recent study by scientists at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus reports the discovery of a molecular mechanism contributing to defective heart development in Down syndrome. The research team, led by Dr. Kunhua Song, associate professor of medicine, employed a combination of experiments using human cells with and without trisomy 21 and a mouse model of Down syndrome to illuminate the molecular basis of impaired heart formation.


Author News Medical | Publish Date June 21, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Denver Health building transitional apartments for patients who have nowhere to go

“We can’t make people healthy without housing,” said Sarah Stella, an internal medicine physician at Denver Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], who also leads housing and health initiatives at the hospital.


Author 9News | Publish Date June 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

‘Just Us’ documentary explores the lives of LGBTQ people

A University of Colorado School of Medicine associate professor who normally looks at the relationship between communication and LGBTQ health care outcomes pivoted from her usual field of study during the pandemic. While most people were quarantining, Carey Candrian, 41, who’d never made a film before, sat on a couch with a cinematographer, and interviewed LGBTQ individuals and couples, to find out how they lived.


Author CPR | Publish Date June 19, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Ellipsis

Samuel Porter, MD, reflects on the impersonal nature of electronic communications in medicine in “Ellipsis,” a Perspective published on June 17 in The New England Journal of Medicine.


Full Story

Press Coverage

Cannabis May Ease ’Chemo Brain’ and Improve Sleep

For the study, Bryan collaborated with oncologists Dr. Ross Camidge and Dr. Daniel Bowles at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus to observe 25 cancer patients who used cannabis over two weeks. After a baseline appointment in which their pain levels, sleep patterns and cognition were assessed, they were asked to purchase the edible product of their choosing from a dispensary.


Author Real Health | Publish Date June 17, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado just recorded its lowest number of COVID hospitalizations since the start of the pandemic

“With the current variants, COVID-19 is mostly an outpatient disease for most adults,” said Anuj Mehta, a pulmonary care physician at Denver Health [and assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], and member of the Colorado Vaccine Equity Taskforce.

“The low hospitalization likely is a reflection of sustained community immunity and again, in general, less severe infection,” said Michelle Barron, an infectious disease expert at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] via email.


Author CPR | Publish Date June 16, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Mayor-Elect Mike Johnston Announces Co-Chairs for 28 Transition Committees

Mayor-Elect Mike Johnston’s transition committee, Vibrant Denver, announced the co-chairs for all 28 committees of the transition. Dr. Joshua Barocas, Director of Social Determinants of Health & Disparities Modeling Unit, CU Anschutz Medical Campus will serve as co-chair for the Public Health and Environment Committee.


Author Vibrant Denver | Publish Date June 16, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

PAD plus diabetes ‘unique’ malignant phenotype; proper medical therapy essential

Approximately one in three patients with diabetes or current smoking aged 50 years or older have PAD, Marc P. Bonaca, professor of medicine and director of vascular research at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, said during a presentation.


Author Healio | Publish Date June 13, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Addressing disparities in diagnosing cystic fibrosis in diverse populations

“Racism does occur in medicine,” Jennifer L. Taylor-Cousar, professor of medicine and pediatrics at National Jewish Health and University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, said during the presentation. “Even though race and ethnicity are social constructs, because of racism, which impact the social determinants of health, we therefore see the effects in medicine.”


Author Healio | Publish Date June 13, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Can the Race of AI Chatbot Avatars Impact Patient Experience?

While some researchers have focused on the quality of information patients can get from chatbots, the CU researchers have zoomed in on the patient experience of using these tools. Particularly, how does the AI chatbot impact the way patients perceive their care, queried Annie Moore, a CU internal medicine professor and the Joyce and Dick Brown Endowed Professor in Compassion in the Patient Experience.

“One of the things we noticed early on was this question of how people perceive the race or ethnicity of the chatbot and what effect that might have on their experience,” Matthew DeCamp, associate professor in the CU Division of General Internal Medicine, said in the press release. “It could be that you share more with the chatbot if you perceive the chatbot to be the same race as you.”


Author Patient Engagement HIT | Publish Date June 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Advocates let Mike Johnston know what they thought of his plan to solve homelessness in four years at a roundtable discussion

Sarah Rowan, an infectious disease specialist at Denver Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said that the city will be making a mistake if services are limited to people who don’t use drugs. Individuals need private homes and fewer rules, if they’re going to participate in programs, advocates argue. “Not everybody wants to be in recovery right now,” Rowan said to Johnston. “If we only treat people who are in recovery, I think we’ll still have homelessness at a pretty large scale.”
 
Josh Barocas, from CU Anschutz, who this year published research that found encampment sweeps can decrease life expectancy for the unhoused, encouraged Johnston to change the narrative about how people discuss homelessness and what it means to create safe occupancy sites and tiny home villages in neighborhoods.


Author Denverite | Publish Date June 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado is getting hotter, but many residents lack access to indoor cooling

“There's a disparity in access to cooling,” said Elizabeth Gillespie, from Denver Health [and assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], who is currently finishing her own research on extreme heat.


Author CPR | Publish Date June 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

CMS is testing new primary care model

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation is testing a new primary care model in eight states: Colorado, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina and Washington.


Author Healthcare Finance | Publish Date June 08, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Anschutz Foundation donates $50 million to CU Anschutz

John J. Reilly, Jr., Dean of the University of Colorado School of Medicine and vice chancellor for health affairs at CU Anschutz, said the $50 million donation provides scientists the funding to “move initiatives forward more rapidly and make an immediate impact in medicine.”


Author Denver Gazette | Publish Date June 07, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Chatbot bias: Do human patients judge AI medical avatars based on their appearance?

“If chatbots are patients’ so-called ‘first touch’ with the health care system, we really need to understand how they experience them and what the effects could be on trust and compassion,” says Annie Moore, a professor of internal medicine, in a university release.


Author Study Finds | Publish Date June 06, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Do chatbot avatars prompt bias in health care?

In 2021, the Greenwall Foundation granted CU Division of General Internal Medicine Associate Professor Matthew DeCamp, MD, Ph.D., and his team of researchers in the CU School of Medicine funds to investigate ethical questions surrounding chatbots. The research team also included Internal medicine professor Annie Moore, MD, MBA...


Author Medical Xpress | Publish Date June 06, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

ReCode, Vertex and 4DMT Seek to Help Untreated Cystic Fibrosis Patients

The currently available CF drugs, called CFTR modulators, are designed to bind to and correct aberrant CFTR protein, said Jennifer Taylor-Cousar, who treats cystic fibrosis in adults and children at National Jewish Health in Denver, Colorado [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] and co-authored a 2023 review article on modulator therapies.


Author Biospace | Publish Date June 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Public Health On Call: 621 - The Health Consequences of Displacing People Experiencing Homelessness

What happens when homeless encampments are swept away? Dr. Joshua Barocas, an infectious disease physician at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, talks with Dr. Josh Sharfstein about a new study that simulates the true cost of “move along” orders and encampment “clean ups"—including infectious disease outbreaks, hospitalizations and deaths. They then discuss the short-term and long-term implications of these findings.


Author Public Health On Call | Publish Date June 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

What really happens inside you when you’re hit by lightning?

I called up my friend and fellow storm chaser, Jason Persoff, the Assistant Director of Emergency Preparedness at the University of Colorado Hospital in Denver….“First up, you have to understand that there are two different types of lightning strikes when you’re talking about the human body: positive and negative,” he explained. “Positive strikes are far more powerful of the two, and generally, if you’re hit by one of those, there’s only one outcome: death. On the other hand, negative strikes are less powerful but [still move] an incredible amount of energy.”


Author Weather Network | Publish Date June 01, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Charles Barkley talks weight loss and managing Type 2 diabetes

According to Cecilia Low Wang, a UCHealth expert on endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism, Mounjaro “suppresses appetite and makes you feel more full. It changes the rate at which your stomach empties.” Continued Low Wang, “It’s a completely new drug class. Instead of being a single-receptor agonist, Mounjaro activates two receptors at the same time. That’s why it’s called a ‘dual-agonist.’”


Author Yahoo News | Publish Date May 31, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Endurance, respiratory symptom burden improve 1 year after COVID-19 hospitalization

“The findings support what we have seen regarding post-COVID recovery,” Sarah E. Jolley, assistant professor in the division of pulmonary sciences and critical care medicine at University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Center, told Healio. “Namely, patients recovering from COVID experience a variety of long-term impairments including decreases in physical function, increased pulmonary symptomatology and fatigue.”


Author Healio | Publish Date May 31, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

New Documentary Examines History and Future of the LGBTQ Community

Carey Candrian, an associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, has spent the last nine years of her life researching health equity in older LGBTQ+ communities. As a lesbian herself, Candrian is deeply invested not only in collecting accurate data, but also in finding ways to humanize such statistics.


Author Westword | Publish Date May 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

High likelihood for OSA, depression, poor asthma control in patients with asthma, insomnia

“I hope these findings raise awareness among providers that patients with asthma may have poor nocturnal control, or poor disease control in general, because of their asthma but also are impacted by other underlying mood and sleep disorders,” Sarah Rhoads, a second-year pulmonary sciences and critical care medicine fellow at the University of Colorado, told Healio. “I would like to see more attention paid to patients’ sleep quality, similar to the way that depression assessments have made it into the standard of care.”


Author Healio | Publish Date May 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Updates in the Bladder Cancer Space Lead to Changes in NCCN Guidelines

Thomas Flaig, vice chancellor of research for the University of Colorado Denver, member, University of Colorado Cancer Center, and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Chair of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Guidelines Panel for Bladder Cancer, discusses recent updates seen in the bladder cancer space and how they have led to changes to the NCCN guidelines.


Author Targeted Oncology | Publish Date May 29, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Worried you may have long COVID? Here are the top 12 symptoms

In addition to the University of Arizona, several health care organizations and schools were involved in the study, among them Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, the University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.


Author Arizona Republic | Publish Date May 26, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Is it really better to eat slowly? It may be a ‘half-truth’ at best.

According to Janine Higgins, a pediatric endocrinologist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, many of the ideas surrounding the benefits or detriments of certain eating speeds are still theoretical.


Author Advisory Board | Publish Date May 25, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage   

RECOVER Study Offers Expanded Working Definition of Long COVID

Along with Horwitz and Foulkes, the writing committee for the study included first author Tanayott Thaweethai, PhD of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and additional authors Caitlin Selvaggi, MS, Daniel Shinnick, MS, and Carolin Schulte, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital; Elizabeth Karlson, MD, MS, Bruce Levy, MD, and Rachel Atchley, PhD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Sairam Parthasarathy, MD, of the University of Arizona College of Medicine Tucson; Upinder Singh, MD, of Stanford University School of Medicine; Sarah Jolley, MD, MS, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus…


Author Associated Press | Publish Date May 25, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Your allergy symptoms may be worse this year

“Washing your hands can often help you prevent transferring allergens from your hands to your nose and mouth,” Flavia Hoyte, allergist and immunologist at National Jewish Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said.


Author KDVR | Publish Date May 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Can a Saliva Test Predict the Best Way to Manage Obesity?

There is always concern when a diagnostic test is being developed for commercial use, said Daniel Bessesen, MD, a professor of medicine-endocrinology, metabolism, and diabetes at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver. “What they're talking about doing is super important. But this is a company. This is a company that is, I think, selling a product.”


Author WebMD | Publish Date May 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

30 Healthcare IT Influencers Worth a Follow in 2023

CT Lin has been the chief medical information officer for the UCHealth system since 2012. He also is a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He runs a blog called “The Undiscovered Country,” which focuses on his experience as a CMIO. Lin tweets about health IT and informatics.


Author HealthTech | Publish Date May 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Virtual roadmap tool may improve safety during PCI, reducing contrast volume, radiation

“Dynamic Coronary Roadmap is a PCI navigation support tool that may potentially facilitate PCI and increased procedural safety by projecting a virtual coronary roadmap onto the moving fluoroscopy,” John C. Messenger, professor of medicine and director of interventional cardiology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine University of Colorado Hospital, said during a presentation.


Author Healio | Publish Date May 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Maine Resident Dies of Rare Tick-Borne Virus as Cases Spread Across U.S.

“Most people who are infected have no symptoms and fully recover,” Daniel Pastula, an associate professor of neurology, infectious diseases and epidemiology at the University of Colorado school of Medicine, previously told Newsweek. “A subset, within one to four weeks develop a pretty bad flu-like illness. And a subset of those people develop Powassan neuroinvasive disease. That’s where we are seeing the severity.”


Author Newsweek | Publish Date May 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

How Colorado’s insulin cap law evolved

There was a lot of rejoicing when Colorado’s first insulin law took effect in January 2020, but there were also a lot of questions, according to Satish K. Garg, professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Barbara Davis Center for Diabetes, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.


Author Healio | Publish Date May 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado doctors leading new firearm injury prevention initiative

Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have a similar mission and have launched the Firearm Injury Prevention Initiative to take a closer look at why. “So, what we are trying to do is use, research, education, and collaboration with communities to prevent all types of firearm injuries and death that includes those in our home so suicide, accidents, domestic violence,” Emmy Betz said. Betz is leading the initiative that will bring doctors and scientists together to take a nonpartisan look at the data around firearm injuries and deaths.


Author CBS News | Publish Date May 16, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Experts Outline Strategies for Boosting Equity in Chronic Kidney Disease

Lilia Cervantes, of the University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, noted that roughly 180 to 200 undocumented patients in Colorado find themselves critically ill in the emergency department each week in need of emergency dialysis. In February 2019, Colorado opted to expand access to dialysis to undocumented immigrants with kidney failure. Since then, 20 states have passed similar laws. 


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date May 15, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado’s doctors and nurses are still disproportionately white. These groups are trying to change that.

Getting students into medical school is only part of the battle, though, said Terri Richardson, a retired internal medicine specialist and member of the Mile High Medical Society. The group “adopts” students at the CU School of Medicine, taking them home for holidays and holding social events.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date May 14, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Here’s how the COVID-19 public health emergency ending will impact Coloradans

“Treatments such as Paxlovid will continue to be provided free as long as supplies last, independent of the public health emergency,” said Dr. Thomas Campbell, an infectious disease doctor at the UCHealth Anschutz campus. “Those will eventually be transitioned to typical coverage through insurance and third party payers.”


Author CPR | Publish Date May 11, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Analyzing the blood of elite cyclists could help prevent chronic diseases

“We cannot understand imperfection – such as multiple metabolic diseases – if we don’t understand perfection in the first place,” said study co-author Iñigo San Millán, an assistant professor in the Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author Earth.com | Publish Date May 09, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Webinar: Battling Health Disparities in Treating Chronic Kidney Disease

In this webinar, hear from an expert panel about some of the most promising efforts underway to improve access to the most effective kidney care for all. Panel includes Lilia Cervantes, Director of Immigrant Health and an Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.


Full Story

Press Coverage

23 Pandemic Decisions That Actually Went Right

Create vaccine pop-ups. For many older adults and people with limited mobility, getting vaccinated was largely a logistical challenge. Setting up temporary clinics where they lived—at senior centers or low-income housing, as in East Boston, for instance—helped ensure that transportation would not be an obstacle for them, said Josh Barocas, an infectious-diseases doctor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author The Atlantic | Publish Date May 09, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Exercise Vs Nutrition: The Key To A Successful Weight Loss Journey

Based on a recent study from the University of Colorado Anschutz Health and Wellness Centre at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus, physical activity helps maintain significant weight loss more successfully than a diet. “By providing evidence that a group of successful weight-loss maintainers engages in high levels of physical activity to prevent weight regain – rather than chronically restricting their energy intake,” said Danielle Ostendorf, a postdoctoral fellow at the CU Anschutz Health and Wellness Center.


Author Zee News | Publish Date May 07, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

How To Combat The Antibiotic Resistance Crisis

Ira discusses some of the possible solutions to this vexing problem and takes listener questions with Victor Nizet, faculty lead of the Collaborative to Halt Antibiotic-Resistant Microbes at the University of California San Diego and Eddie Stenehjem, executive vice chair of medicine at the University of Colorado.


Author Science Friday | Publish Date May 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Women, Medicaid users less likely to receive ECMO treatment

“Our work adds to a growing body of literature highlighting sex, race, insurance and income disparities in all areas of health care but especially in advanced life sustaining therapies,” Anuj B. Mehta, assistant professor of medicine within the division of pulmonary sciences and critical care medicine at Denver Health and Hospital Authority and the University of Colorado School of Medicine, told Healio.


Author Healio | Publish Date May 03, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Why viral reservoirs are a prime suspect for long COVID sleuths

Brent Palmer’s first inkling about long COVID started in the early days of the pandemic, before the term “long COVID” even existed. Some of his friends had caught the virus while on a ski trip and returned home to Colorado with the mysterious, new illness. It was a frightening time — and an irresistible opportunity for Palmer, [an associate professor of medicine] who studies the immune response to infectious diseases like HIV.


Author NPR | Publish Date May 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Weight Loss Really Is Harder for Women in Midlife

“This at least suggests that there might be a biological driver [behind women’s midlife weight gain] and it’s not just what you choose to do,” says Wendy Kohrt, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, who was senior researcher on both studies.


Author Wall Street Journal | Publish Date May 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Volleyball coach Mike Nauta is fighting cancer in Colorado, needs the community’s help

“UC Health is one of the top hospitals in the U.S. … I can fight this battle while doing my very best at work,” said Nauta, adding, “Antonio Jimeno at UC Health and the oncology team has given me a very optimistic outlook in terms of beating this ugly opponent.”


Author Guam Daily Post | Publish Date April 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Northglenn 26-year-old lung transplant recipient is on the road to recovery

He said his doctor, Alice Gray, associate professor of medicine and medical director of the lung transplant program at UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital, told Yang he would be placed on ECMO, a form of life support that gets oxygen to the body without help from the lungs.


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date April 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

In California Study, Many Veterans at Risk of Suicide Have Unlocked Gun at Home

"Easy access to a loaded firearm is an important risk factor for suicide," said lead author Dr. Joseph Simonetti, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora. "It's concerning to see that this many veterans who have previously thought about ending their lives keep firearms loaded and unsecured in the home."


Author HealthDay | Publish Date April 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

I Tried to Cure My Burnout. Here’s What Happened.

I’d traveled to the University of Colorado’s School of Medicine to take this humiliating stab at vulnerability in the name of science (and my own sanity). The Colorado Resiliency Arts Lab (CORAL), an ongoing research project at the school, aims to help people who are burned out from their jobs build resilience and improve their mental well-being….The burnout study there had the extreme misfortune of trying to launch in March 2020, just as the U.S. was shutting down. Marc Moss, a critical-care physician and CORAL’s principal investigator, had intended to study burnout reduction among intensive-care providers.


Author TIME | Publish Date April 27, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado cities still won’t be allowed to authorize “overdose prevention centers” after legislature rejects bill

“At the end of the day, if we save one life with an overdose prevention center, I think it’s worth it,” Joshua Barocas, a professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, testified Thursday before the Senate Health and Human Services Committee.


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date April 26, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Sacklers Gave Millions to Institution That Advises Opioid Policy

Lisa Bero, chief scientist at the University of Colorado Center for Bioethics and Humanities, said the group’s longtime failure to disclose financial ties between committee members and industry placed the Academies in the “dark ages” of research integrity. Accepting millions of dollars from the Sackler family while advising the federal government on pain policy “would be considered a conflict of interest under almost any conflict-of-interest policy I’ve ever seen,” Dr. Bero said.


Author The New York Times | Publish Date April 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Denver woman with rare liver disease searching for living donor

“The liver is the only organ, besides your skin, that can regenerate,” explained James Burton, medical director of liver transplantation for UCHealth. “You can remove more than half your liver if you have tumor on it, and you can remove more than half your liver and give it to someone else.”


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date April 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Blood, Breast Cancer Survivors Stand Out for Heart Risks Over a Decade Later

Nevertheless, the authors have opened the door to some precision in the follow-up care of cancer survivors, according to an accompanying editorial by Jose Banchs, of University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, and Tara Lech, of Beth Israel Lahey Health in Westwood, Massachusetts.


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date April 19, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Optimal Time Period for Weight Loss Drugs: Debate Continues

Dan Bessesen, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, and chief of endocrinology, agrees. Patients are unlikely to stay on these medications if they feel nauseous or experience vomiting, he said.


Author Medscape | Publish Date April 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Fatigue is common among older adults, and has many causes

What often happens is older adults with fatigue stop being active and become deconditioned, which leads to muscle loss and weakness, which heightens fatigue. “It becomes a vicious cycle that contributes to things like depression, which can make you more fatigued,” said Jean Kutner, a professor of medicine [at CU School of Medicine] and chief medical officer at the University of Colorado Hospital.


Author News Tribune | Publish Date April 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

VIDEO: Minority Health Awareness Month highlights care practices for Hispanic patients

In this video, Lilia Cervantes, associate professor at University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, discusses what physicians may not consider when treating Hispanic patients. “For those of you taking care of Latinx patients, it's important to consider some of the challenges that they face, including limited English proficiency,” Cervantes told Healio.


Author Healio | Publish Date April 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado Matters: April 13, 2023: ‘Black men in white coats’ increases diversity in medicine

Black men make up roughly three percent of doctors in the United States; an initiative on the University of Colorado’s Anschutz campus is answering the call to increase diversity in medicine….Shanta Zimmer, senior associate dean for education: “What Black Men in White Coats really does is shine a light on the disparities in the number of black men and women who have gone into the field of medicine, while the percentage of the U.S. population that identifies as Black has increased over time, the representation in medicine has lagged behind quite a bit.”


Author CPR | Publish Date April 13, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Integrating addiction medicine into primary care found to be clinically effective

"Providing these services in primary care settings and keeping patients healthier may help decrease costly emergency and hospital services by preventing overdoses and severe infections that can come with injection drug use," says Josh Barocas, M.D., associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. "Additionally, adopting harm-reduction kits in primary care settings is an act of compassion and would likely help vulnerable users feel more compelled to step forward when in need of help."


Author Medical Xpress | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Eaglecrest High School students to return to class after death of teacher with bacterial meningitis

“(Cases of bacterial meningitis are) fairly rare, thankfully,” said Robert Belknap of Denver Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “This is not something that people need to be concerned that the school is unsafe.”


Author CBS News | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Bacterial meningitis is in Colorado’s headlines. Here’s what you should know about the disease

What is bacterial meningitis? And what should people know about the infection? Denver7 took these questions and more to UCHealth Senior Medical Director of Infection Prevention Michelle Barron [professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] and other health sources to learn more about bacterial meningitis.


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado Matters: April 12, 2023: Art therapy eases stress for medical workers

Research at CU Anschutz in Aurora looks at how making art might help ease stress and trauma in the health care field. Marc Moss, a critical care doctor at the University of Colorado medical center who has studied mental health in hospital workers for decades. “We’ve been studying mental health in health care workers for about 20 years now, and when we would first present this at national meetings people didn’t really appreciate or understand the magnitude of what we were talking about. We initially called it a silent epidemic.”


Author CPR | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Long COVID may be due to the virus sticking around after infection, researchers say

Brent Palmer’s research on long COVID started before that phrase meant anything. Palmer had some friends who’d caught the virus while on a ski trip. It was March 2020. And they’d returned home with this new illness. Palmer works at the University of Colorado, where he studies how the immune system responds to infectious diseases. So this was too good to pass up. He started collecting their blood and was intrigued by one person in particular.


Author NPR | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Long COVID is real – and complex. A major study aims to untangle its causes.

RECOVER will probably be the largest U.S. trial of its kind, says Dr. Kristine Erlandson, the infectious disease specialist who leads the study’s Colorado site. 

Critical-care medicine specialist Dr. Sarah Jolley, medical director of the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic, is co-author of a forthcoming RECOVER-based study that assigns many of the long COVID-related maladies into five domains, she says. They include:


Author UCHealth | Publish Date April 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Pushing Homeless Out of Encampments Can Bring Deadly Toll: Study

“Our research shows that these widespread practices that forcibly displace people are clearly impacting the health of this population, particularly when it comes to increasing their overdose risk, so much so that it actually decreases the life expectancy of the entire population,” said co-author Josh Barocas, associate professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.


Author HealthDay | Publish Date April 11, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Can One Blood Test Transform Cancer Screening?

“I think it has significant potential and is very exciting,” said Marie Wood, director of the Cancer Clinical Trials Office at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, who predicts a MCED test could help overcome barriers to screening. “But I think it has a ways to go.”


Author Cancer Health | Publish Date April 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Homeless encampment sweeps ‘decrease life expectancy,’ a new study suggests

This new paper was led by principal investigator Joshua Barocas, an infectious disease doctor and associate professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.


Author Denverite | Publish Date April 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Homeless sweeps, camping bans are a health risk to the unhoused, study finds

“It’s estimated that more than 500,000 people are experiencing homelessness in the U.S. and understanding the toll practices such as camping bans and sweeps take on such a substantial population is critical to emphasizing the need for care and services versus literally being swept aside,” said Josh Barocas, associate professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and corresponding author.


Author 9News | Publish Date April 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

ECMO Therapy Out of Reach for Multiple Socioeconomic Groups

Women were a relative 27% less likely to receive ECMO than their male counterparts (adjusted OR 0.73, 95% CI 0.70-0.75), while patients on Medicaid were nearly half as likely to be treated with the more advanced treatment for severe respiratory failure than those with private insurance (adjusted OR 0.55 95% CI 0.52-0.57), reported Anuj Mehta, of the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver, and colleagues.


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date April 07, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Income a Factor in Whether You Get Lifesaving ECMO Breathing Support: Study

“The goal is to really get people thinking about where some disparities within critical care might live,” said study author Anuj Mehta, an assistant professor of medicine within the Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine at Denver Health and Hospital Authority and the University of Colorado School of Medicine. 


Author HealthDay | Publish Date April 07, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

The big squeeze: ACA health insurance has lots of customers, small networks

Questions about the accuracy of provider directories persist. Neel Butala, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, found that fewer than 20% of more than 449,000 physician listings had consistent address and specialty area information across five large insurers' directories, according to a research letter published in the Journal of the American Medical Association on March 14.


Author NPR | Publish Date April 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Wegovy vs. Ozempic: The truth about new ‘weight-loss’ drugs

To get answers to your questions, we consulted with Dr. Cecilia Low Wang, a UCHealth expert in endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism.

Low Wang is also a professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine on the Anschutz Medical Campus. And she chairs the committee that advises the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on drugs related to endocrinology and metabolism.


Author UCHealth | Publish Date April 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Fatigue Is Common Among Older Adults, and It has Many Possible Causes

What often happens is older adults with fatigue stop being active and become deconditioned, which leads to muscle loss and weakness, which heightens fatigue. “It becomes a vicious cycle that contributes to things like depression, which can make you more fatigued,” said Jean Kutner, a professor of medicine and chief medical officer at the University of Colorado Hospital.


Author Kaiser Health News | Publish Date April 04, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Making a telehealth appointment? You might still pay a facility fee.

The Colorado bill would prohibit facility fees for primary care visits, preventive care services exempt from cost sharing, and telehealth appointments. Hospitals would be required to notify patients if a facility fee would apply….The bill presents particular challenges for health systems such as UCHealth and Children’s Hospital, which rely on the University of Colorado School of Medicine for staffing. For outpatient appointments, the medical school bills for the physician fee, while the hospital bills a facility fee.


Author Washington Post | Publish Date April 01, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Putting discharge first

ACP Hospitalist recently talked to the co-lead authors of the study about what this means for current and future throughput initiatives. Marisha Burden, MD, FACP, is a professor of medicine and division head of hospital medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora. Angela Keniston, MSPH, is an assistant professor and the director of data and analytics for the division of hospital medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author ACP Hospitalist | Publish Date March 29, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Bill to ban hospital facilities fees gets heated hearing, moves on

These fees are a real cost of doing business, said John Reilly, president of the faculty practice at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He also warned that loss of revenue from the facility fees would result in a downsize of training programs and fewer physicians who want to practice in Colorado. These fees have existed for decades, he pointed out, but the trend toward high-deductible health plans are largely why those fees are now showing up in consumer bills.


Author Denver Gazette | Publish Date March 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

CDC warns of drug-resistant fungus spreading rapidly across healthcare facilities

“It’s pretty much not something at all that should be of concern unless you’re hospitalized and then you’re probably not healthy at that moment and people that live in long-term care facilities,” said Michelle Barron, senior medical of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author KOAA | Publish Date March 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Drink Up: Coffee Won’t Affect Your Heart Rhythms

“Most people have around 100,000 heartbeats per day,” said David Kao, an associate professor of medicine and cardiology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Doing the math, he said, on days when trial participants drank coffee, about 0.15% of their heartbeats involved a premature ventricular contraction -- versus 0.1% on no-caffeine days.


Author HealthDay | Publish Date March 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

15,000 Coloradans have died due to COVID, a loss of historic proportions

“Fifteen thousand deaths is just terrible and it kind of forces us to reflect on what's happened,” said Anuj Mehta, a pulmonary care physician at Denver Health [assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], and member of the Colorado Vaccine Equity Taskforce.


Author CPR | Publish Date March 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Doctors may miss how addiction patients cheat drug tests

“These patients are at particularly high risk for opioid overdose, as they are not receiving the protective effects of buprenorphine,” said Jarratt Pytell of University of Colorado School of Medicine, who led the study published Wednesday by JAMA Psychiatry.


Author Associated Press | Publish Date March 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Opinion: Two bills would be catastrophic to CU Anschutz’s world-class care

“The first bill, House Bill 1215, would prohibit clinics from covering the costs of paying their essential workers, including nurses, pharmacists, social workers, housekeeping, and others. It gives government officials the power to decide where patients get medical care. The Colorado Hospital Association estimates that most hospitals would be unable to pay their bills and hundreds of clinics would close. Layoffs would be inevitable.
 
“A second bill, House Bill 1243, would prohibit hospitals from counting support for research, education, and training as a community benefit. This restriction will curtail funding that supports our programs and would have an immediate and lasting negative impact on the state.
 
“And it’s not just us concerned about these bills. Every clinical department chair in the School of Medicine has signed on to oppose this legislation.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date March 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Allergy season begins: What to know this spring in Colorado

“Year after year, there’s always going to be someone that tells me this is the worst season yet or this season feels worse than last year,” Flavia Hoyte with National Jewish Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] said.


Author 9News | Publish Date March 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado’s nonprofit hospitals would be required to spend more on “community benefit” under new bill

Photo: Sixto Giusti [assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] sees a kidney transplant patient who is part of the UCHealth Hispanic Transplant Program at Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, Colorado, on Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2022.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date March 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Storm chasing doctor captures beauty in weather

There’s a unique art display in Aurora featuring the photography of a local storm chaser. Jason Persoff is a doctor. He’s also an associate professor of medicine and teaches med students, residents and nurses at the University of Colorado Anschutz medical campus. “I’m what’s called a hospitalist,” he said. “It’s my job is to usher you through the system on the inpatient end after you leave the emergency department.”


Author 9News | Publish Date March 17, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

American Cancer Society says younger people are being diagnosed with colon cancer

The ACS said colon cancer diagnosis jumped from 11% in 1995 to 20% in 2019. UCHealth University of Colorado of Hospital gastroenterologist Swati Patel says that alarming trend needs more awareness this Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month.


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date March 16, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

The Ultimate Hack for Your Health Is Simpler Than You’d Think – It’s Exercise

“Getting 150 minutes a week [of aerobic exercise] is clearly enough to prevent a number of diseases and conditions, including coronary heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke, Type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, colon cancer, breast cancer, and depression, as well as all-cause mortality and falls and declines in cognitive function,” says Judith Regensteiner, professor of medicine and director of the Center for Women’s Health Research at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author Yahoo News | Publish Date March 14, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Opinion: The heartbreak of keeping quiet

Opinion by Carey Candrian, of Boulder, an associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and on the Board of Directors at GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing Health Equity: “The end of life can be a time of reconciliation. But often not for LGBTQ people who face rampant discrimination and are often shut out by the way people talk and listen to them. Let me give you an example.”


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date March 12, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Opinion: A tougher drug-related homicide law won’t reduce overdose deaths

Opinion by Joshua Barocas, of Denver, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “In response to the overdose crisis that has consumed Colorado, largely attributable to illicitly manufactured fentanyl, some lawmakers are turning toward ‘supply side’ interventions that they believe will curb overdose deaths.


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date March 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

CU to Study How Psilocybin Affects Mental Health of Cancer Patients

For the first time ever, the National Cancer Institute is funding a study that will look into psilocybin’s effect on the emotional and mental suffering of terminal cancer patients. Led by CU doctors Stacy Fischer and Jim Grigsby, the study will monitor patients who undergo extensive sessions of psychotherapy, during which each participant will receive 25 milligrams of psilocybin, a “moderate to high dose” that is enough for ego dissolution, according to Fischer.


Author Westword | Publish Date March 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Allergy season is starting earlier. Here are tips for dealing with spring pollen and allergy symptoms

If you have a doctor-prescribed steroid for allergies, you should be taking it now, Flavia Hoyte from National Jewish Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] told CBS News.


Author CBS News | Publish Date March 10, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Nearly 50% of Women Skip Preventative Health Appointments—Here Are the Checkups to Prioritize

“The reason that we do these tests is to catch things early,” Amy G. Huebschmann, MD, MSc, FACP, a primary care physician and a researcher with the Ludeman Family Center for Women’s Health Research at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, told Health. "There are always things we can do.”


Author Health.com | Publish Date March 09, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Cognitive behavioral therapy mobile app improves health behavior in patients with diabetes

“Cardiometabolic diseases, and at its core, type 2 diabetes, are largely behavioral-acquired diseases and they’re related to unhelpful behaviors. But when we drive to what are the core, root causes of these behavioral choices, they have to do with thoughts and beliefs that lead to unhelpful behaviors and then unhelpful food choices, eating, exercise or behaviors and then type 2 diabetes,” Marc P. Bonaca, executive director of CPC Clinical Research, professor of cardiology and vascular medicine and director of vascular research at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, said during a press conference.


Author Healio | Publish Date March 08, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Lifelong bachelorhood tied to mortality in men with heart failure

“Our team was interested in the connection between a person’s life circumstances and the trajectory of heart disease,” Katarina Leyba, a resident physician at the University of Colorado, told Healio. “As doctors, it is important that we see the whole patient in front of us and that we consider the context of a person’s life, not just their list of medications.”


Author Healio | Publish Date March 08, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Raising awareness for colorectal cancer

Swati Patel [associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] joins us to talk about raising awareness for colorectal cancer.


Author 9 News | Publish Date March 07, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

An Unexpected Side Effect of Many Medical Treatments – Trauma

Families of patients are also susceptible to developing medical PTSD, Tim Amass, a physician and professor of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical care at the University of Colorado Medical School, tells Inverse. Last April, Amass, and his colleagues published a study in JAMA showing that, during the pandemic, instances of PTSD among family members of patients in the ICU nearly doubled compared to pre-pandemic.


Author Inverse | Publish Date March 06, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado’s lost lessons from Spanish flu revisited as COVID-19 pandemic turns 3 years old

Michelle Barron, senior director of infection prevention at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], agreed. Despite the missteps, Barron said she believes history will reflect well on the scientific achievement, creating an effective vaccine in record time. “Science matters,” Barron said. “But it’s got to be good science.”


Author Denver Gazette | Publish Date March 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

YouTuber “Physics Girl” dealing with long COVID as her sister helps from Denver

UCHealth hospital is one of the national sites for the recovery study on long COVID. Sarah Jolley [assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] and her team are spearheading that research.


Author CBS News | Publish Date March 05, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Study: Daily cannabis use can affect the heart

An unpublished study to be presented at a cardiology conference this weekend found that daily cannabis use could contribute to heart issues. Lori Walker, PhD, with CU Anschutz is interviewed.


Author KDVR | Publish Date March 03, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado considers ‘safe injection sites’ to prevent overdoses

But proponents argue it’s an imperative first step to tackling drug use, with many repeating a one-argument refrain. “You can’t enter treatment if you are dead,” said Joshua Barocas, an associate professor at the University of Colorado who studies substance use disorder. “All the data suggests that people are going to do drugs regardless. ... All we are trying to do is reverse the harm that could come from what people are already doing.”


Author CPR | Publish Date March 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

How Hospitals are Tackling Violence

When asked if violence has increased at his hospital, Jason Persoff, an associate professor of medicine in the division of hospital medicine at the University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, Colo., an urban, adult, academic hospital with 850 beds, said patients are becoming increasingly outspoken and dissatisfied with care due to limited visitor access to patients, increased delays in care due to overrun hospitals, and care at the hands of some burned out clinical staff…. “Frustration and misinformation have further demoralized clinicians and simultaneously created an antagonistic relationship from time to time as patients argue about what is and isn’t scientific fact,” Persoff said.


Author The Hospitalist | Publish Date March 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Eli Lilly caps insulin costs at $35 a month

Denver Health physician Ro Pereira [associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] agrees. She told 9NEWS the announcement is lifesaving. “We have many, many patients who come to me and say I can’t afford my insulin and I haven't been using what you prescribe because I can’t,” Pereira said. “So to make it affordable to everybody is really just wonderful.”


Author 9 News | Publish Date March 01, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Black cystic fibrosis patient shares struggles with diagnosis, triumph in finding Colorado specialist

Jennifer Taylor-Cousar [professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] helped Alder discover her ultimate diagnosis, cystic fibrosis….“I’ve been doing CF for more than 20 years and from the time I was taught in medical school, and I was taught it was a disease that impacted white people. As I moved forward in my career, I started to bring this up at different tables,” Taylor-Cousar said.


Author CBS News | Publish Date March 01, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Diabetes doctor says it’s “high time” insulin prices are lowered

Satish Garg with the University of Colorado Barbara Davis Center for Diabetes says drug manufacturers need to lower insulin prices. “These insulins cost hardly anything to make it and patients were being charged sometimes anywhere between $200 to $600,” he said.


Author CBS News | Publish Date March 01, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

What to know about Colorado's "red flag" law as state ponders changes

The inconsistencies also relate to the broad discretion granted to judges, says Chris Knoepke, assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. "All of these standards are all over the map, and there's no checklist," Knoepke told CPR.


Author Axios | Publish Date February 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Exposure to intimate partner violence may lead to uncontrolled asthma

In a longitudinal observational study, Eileen Wang, of National Jewish Health and University of Colorado School of Medicine, and colleagues analyzed 45 adults with asthma to observe how intimate partner violence (IPV) is related to poor asthma control after 3 to 6 months.


Author Healio | Publish Date February 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Most mask requirements will end at UCHealth and Denver Health

The system has been monitoring community transmission rates, hospitalization rates, as a surrogate for disease severity, wastewater surveillance for COVID-19, vaccination rates against COVID-19 as well as the trends for RSV and influenza, said Michelle Barron, the senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “We feel that it is safe to no longer mandate masking,” Barron said.

Denver Health says the move is aligned with other large health care institutions in the region. “Denver Health’s COVID-19 hospitalization and ICU rates are very low, despite community transmission of the virus,” said chief medical officer Connie Savor Price [professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “Denver Health will continue to monitor this fluid situation.”


Author CPR | Publish Date February 27, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

A Denver Researcher Highlights Older Queer Women Through Photographs

Carey Candrian knows there isn’t much space for art in medicine or academia. Before the pandemic, Candrian, who holds a Ph.D. in health communication and works as a professor at the University of Colorado School Anschutz Medical Campus, received a grant to interview older LGBTQ women in Colorado in order to better understand the challenges they face as they’ve aged.


Author 5280 | Publish Date February 27, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

GUEST COLUMN: Insurer-mandated ‘fail first’ healthcare failing state’s patients

Also referred to as “fail first,” step therapy is an insurer-mandated process that overrules doctor recommendations and disregards a patient’s specific medical needs. Ultimately, it’s a time-consuming process that can lead to worsened health outcomes, writes co-author Frank Scott, an associate professor of medicine-gastroenterology at the University of Colorado.


Author Colorado Springs Gazette | Publish Date February 26, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Digital cognitive behavioral therapy reduces blood sugar levels in patients with diabetes

"When studied in a large randomized controlled trial, digital CBT tailored to the individual reduced blood sugar levels, while also reducing the need for intensified medication use and improving blood pressure and body weight," said Marc P. Bonaca, MD, MPH, professor of medicine and director of vascular research at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora, Colorado, and the study's principal investigator. Digital CBT also had a positive effect on patient-reported outcomes, including depression and quality of life scores over six months, he said.


Author News Medical | Publish Date February 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Risk of death from heart failure may be higher for lifelong bachelors

Lifetime marital history appears to be an important predictor of survival in men with heart failure, but not women. Specifically, lifelong bachelors had significantly worse long-term survival than men who had been married, separated, divorced or widowed, said senior researcher Dr. David Kao, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora.


Author United Press International | Publish Date February 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Dr. Kim on Tislelizumab in Advanced ESCC

Sunnie Kim, assistant professor, medicine — medical oncology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, contextualizes the use of tislelizumab (BGB-A317) as a frontline treatment option in advanced esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC).


Author OncLive | Publish Date February 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado hospitals warn of ‘catastrophic’ consequences of proposed bill

Ahead of the bill’s introduction, the Colorado Hospital Association, joined by representatives from Denver Health, Children’s Hospital Colorado and UCHealth, said that the term “facility fee” is a “terrible misnomer” that has resulted in a policy proposal that would devastate the industry.


Author Denver Business Journal | Publish Date February 23, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Group of Scientists Propose a New Driver of Alzheimer’s Disease: Fructose

“We believe that initially the fructose-dependent reduction in cerebral metabolism in these regions was reversible and meant to be beneficial,” says Richard Johnson, a nephrologist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Center.


Author Science Alert | Publish Date February 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

‘People need it’: Colorado blood cancer survivor urges Americans to consider bone marrow donation

“The first place that we look for a potential donor is a patient’s sibling,” explained Marc Schwartz, a hematologist at the UCHealth Bone Marrow Transplant Clinic [and assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “On average, however, about 70% of patients do not have a fully matched sibling donor. So the next step is to look at an international registry for matched unrelated donors.”


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date February 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Invincible: Family, faith and friends strengthened Air Force veteran as he fought multiple bouts of cancer and COVID-19

Robert Plick received care from Manali Kamdar, MD, clinical director of lymphoma services at the UCHealth Blood Disorders and Cell Therapies Center; Lavanya Kondapalli, MD, the state’s only fellowship-trained cardio-oncologist; and Antonio Jimeno, MD, PhD, a specialist in head and neck cancers.


Author UCHealth | Publish Date February 16, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

You should start taking your allergy medicine now, allergists say

“Tree pollens are present in the air by March, and nasal steroids take two weeks to reach their peak effect,” Flavia Hoyte, allergist and immunologist at National Jewish Health [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said.


Author KDVR | Publish Date February 14, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Paxlovid effective against omicron variant, new research says

“This study was one of the first to strongly suggest a benefit for the antiviral medication, nirmatrelvir-ritonavir, also known as Paxlovid, to prevent hospitalization and death for patients infected with recent Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variants,” Neil Aggarwal, lead author of the study and an associate professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, said in a UC news release.


Author McKnights Long Term Care News | Publish Date February 14, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

The type of sugar that seems to drive Alzheimer's disease as study warns diet is to blame

The study's lead author Richard Johnson said: "We make the case that Alzheimer's disease is driven by diet."

Johnson and his team suggested that Alzheimer's disease is a harmful adaptation of an evolutionary survival pathway used in animals and our distant ancestors during times of scarcity.


Author MSN | Publish Date February 14, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Putting kindness first as she copes with lung cancer

Melissa Turner has coped with Stage IV lung cancer and the loss of a sister to COVID-19. Still, no matter how poorly she feels, she's been bringing creative treats to hospital staffers for more than two years.


Author UCHealth | Publish Date February 13, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

ODAC Votes in Favor of Continued Development of Dostarlimab for dMMR/MSI-H Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

“I voted yes,” Christopher Lieu, MD, co-director, GI Medical Oncology Program and associate director for clinical research, at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, said.


Author OncLive | Publish Date February 09, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Causal links found between GERD, asthma, atopic dermatitis

In an accompanying editorial by Meghan D. Althoff, and Sunita Sharma, of the Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, they wrote that more information on the functional genetic effects that lead to the associations found between asthma, atopic dermatitis and GERD are necessary.


Author Healio | Publish Date February 08, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

CU Anschutz researcher awarded 5-year NIH grant

A researcher at CU Anschutz has landed a major grant to take a closer look on the disparities of care for elderly people in the LGBT community. Carey Candrian has spent more than a decade digging into this issue. Recently, she was awarded a five-year grant from the National Institute of Health's National Institute on Aging to improve care for LGBT older adults in hospice.


Author 9News | Publish Date February 06, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

As many as 1 in 10 Coloradans may have been hit by long COVID, a report says

“I think that’s what’s so unclear about long COVID and potentially concerning about those numbers is that we certainly know some people recover,” but most haven’t, said Sarah Jolley, a researcher with CU Anschutz. Jolley is also the medical director of the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic, one site of a national study looking at recovery after COVID.


Author CPR | Publish Date February 03, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Can exercise prolong life for aging people with HIV?

“There has been a shift in mindset,” said Dr. Kristine Erlandson, associate professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “For those patients diagnosed in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, an HIV diagnosis was kind of a death sentence.”


Author UCHealth | Publish Date February 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Can a Nationwide Liver Paired Donation Program Work?

The National Kidney Association states that the odds of dying during kidney donation are about 3 in 100,000, while estimates for risk of death for living liver donors range from 1 in 500 to 1 in 1000. But some of these estimates are from 10 or more years ago, and outcomes have likely improved, said Whitney Jackson, the medical director of living donor liver transplant at UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora, Colorado [and assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author Medscape | Publish Date January 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

“Huge jump” in pregnant women hospitalized with flu may be due to lagging vaccinations, UCHealth says

Michelle Barron, senior director of infection prevention and control at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said about half of the system’s female patients between the ages of 18 and 44 have been pregnant so far this year. During the 2019-2020 flu season — the last normal one before the pandemic — only about 17% were, which is more typical, she said. “Seventeen percent to 50% is a huge jump, based on historically what we’ve seen,” she said.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date January 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

“Long COVID” Caused by Hidden Viral Reservoirs

“The persistence of high numbers of virus-specific T cells in individuals with long COVID suggests that there may be hidden viral reservoirs that are maintaining and leading to long-term symptoms,” said Brent Palmer, the study’s senior author and an associate professor of allergy and clinical immunology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author Contagion Live | Publish Date January 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

ERPO in 8 charts: What we learned from reading hundreds of ‘red flag’ cases in Colorado

A smaller number of respondents — about a third of all cases — were reportedly considering death by suicide. The lower prevalence of suicidal people is “surprising,” said Chris Knoepke, assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “We know risk of self-harm, risk of suicide, is more prevalent in general than very high-level threats to other people,” Knoepke said.


Author CPR | Publish Date January 30, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Little-noticed change in spending bill is big leap for addiction treatment, Colorado experts say

“(Ending the waiver) stops setting aside buprenorphine as another medicine that needs some kind of special understanding in order to utilize it clinically,” said Josh Blum, a Denver Health physician and past president of the Colorado chapter of the American Society of Addiction Medicine [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date January 28, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

High-Earning Men Are Cutting Back on Their Working Hours

Lotte Dyrbye, the chief well-being officer for the University of Colorado School of Medicine, said she often hears from early-career physicians and other medical professionals who want to work fewer hours to avoid burnout. These medical workers are deciding that to be in it for the long haul requires a day every week or two to decompress, Dyrbye says. But as staff cut back their hours, it costs medical organizations money and may compromise access to care.


Author Wall Street Journal | Publish Date January 26, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Does Cannabis Use Impair Treatment Adherence?

Kristine Erlandson, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, and colleagues aimed to characterize associations between cannabis use and antiretroviral adherence in a cohort of older people with HIV.


Author POZ | Publish Date January 25, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

A Closer Look at the Most Recent NCCN Guidelines for Bladder Cancer

“One thing that’s really defined the treatment of bladder cancer patients in the last 5 years or so has been the introduction of immune checkpoint inhibitors. The use of these agents initially started out as a later-line of therapy and these agents are being tested across different disease states,” noted Thomas Flaig, vice chancellor of research for the University of Colorado Denver, member, University of Colorado Cancer Center, and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Chair of the NCCN Guidelines Panel for Bladder Cancer, in an interview with Targeted Oncology.


Author Targeted Oncology | Publish Date January 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Pueblo senior fast tracked to prestigious medical program

Ian Espinoza, a high-achieving scholar at South High School, is one of only 10 Colorado seniors to be accepted into a prestigious collegiate program that will fast-track him to medical school. The BA/BS-MD Degree Program at the University of Colorado Denver and Anschutz Medical Campus aims to promote the diversity of practicing medical professionals in Colorado and to better serve the healthcare needs of the state by assembling up to 10 outstanding students each year from broadly diverse backgrounds.
 
“This offer is an indication of the high regard the school holds, not only for your past academic and personal accomplishments but also for our assessment of your capabilities as a future undergraduate student and physician,” wrote Matthew Taylor of the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “As part of this program, you will be completing your four years of undergraduate studies at the University of Colorado Denver and your four years of medical school at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.”


Author KOAA | Publish Date January 24, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Perspective | How the way we talk and listen to each other can prevent discrimination

Carey Candrian is an associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. In her research, she investigates how health care can be compromised if an open discussion with patients about what and who matters most to them is avoided.


Author Rocky Mountain PBS | Publish Date January 22, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado donor groups work to close racial gaps in who gets organ transplants

Sixto Giusti, director of the Hispanic Transplant Program at UCHealth [and assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said when Hispanic patients are referred for treatment, they tend to be further along in the disease process, making it harder to prevent the need for extreme measures like transplantation.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date January 21, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

(Opinion) Joshua Barocas: What does 'fighting fentanyl' mean, Rep. Lynch?

As a physician who treats people with substance use disorders, I (Joshua Barocas) am highly skeptical of how Rep. Lynch and other lawmakers intend to continue this fight. My main concern is how their “fight” will affect my patients.


Author Greeley Tribune | Publish Date January 20, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Jan. 19, 2023: Help for people with OCD

Moksha Patel, who’s a physician at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, suffered from debilitating symptoms of OCD, including obsessive hand-washing, showering, even using cleaning agents like bleach to clean his body.


Author CPR | Publish Date January 19, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

For those with debilitating OCD, a surgical procedure can help

Deep brain stimulation is increasingly being used for people suffering from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder or OCD, which affects about three percent of the population. Dr. Moksha Patel, who's a physician at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, suffered from debilitating symptoms of OCD, including obsessive hand-washing, showering, even using cleaning agents like bleach to clean his body. He said the symptoms made him feel like a prisoner of his own mind and kept him from many day-to-day activities.


Author Colorado Public Radio | Publish Date January 19, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Should You Quit Your Job?

“There is an overlapping Venn diagram between burnout and depression,” said Dr. Lotte Dyrbye, the chief well-being officer at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “If you have even an inkling of a suspicion that you’re not well, that’s what your primary care doctor is for, to help you figure that out.”


Author The New York Times | Publish Date January 19, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

The top items on 5 chief medical officers’ to-do lists

Connie Savor Price, Chief Medical Officer of Denver Health [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]: With the current workforce shortages, “tripledemic” and everyday demands, the challenge of burnout in healthcare should be at the top of every hospital CMO’s to-do list right now. Many healthcare workers are leaving the profession, further compounding shortages. Those who remain are experiencing mental health impacts from the unrelenting pressures of their daily work.


Author Becker's Hospital Review | Publish Date January 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Updates From 2022 SABCS Underscore the Continued Expansion of Treatment Options in Metastatic Breast Cancer

Virginia F. Borges, MD, MMSc, a professor of medicine in the Division of Medical Oncology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and a medical oncologist at the UCHealth Diane O'Connor Thompson Breast Center, Anschutz Medical Campus, and colleagues (Peter Kabos, MD, Elena Shagisultanova, MD, PhD, Radhika Acharya-Leon, DO, Jennifer Diamond, MD and Marie Wood, MD) highlight updates across the breast cancer landscape, including key updates from the 2022 SABCS.


Author OncLive | Publish Date January 18, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Emotional learning through the fine arts, and how it’s helping healthcare workers

At the Colorado Resiliency Arts Lab at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, a team of doctors, therapists and literary scholars are doing just that: exploring how the fine arts can help nurses, doctors, surgeons and other healthcare workers heal from trauma….Marc Moss, a doctor who is part of the CORAL team, said the program received funding from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2019 to prove the value of the fine arts, after the National Endowment for the Arts requested proposals to show Congress that art was worth the money spent.


Author Littleton Independent | Publish Date January 11, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

The Symptoms Of COVID Variant XBB That Doctors Are Seeing Right Now

Less common symptoms include loss of taste and smell and shortness of breath. Anosmia and ageusia appear, anecdotally, to be less common with XBB. Experts don’t expect ageusia and anosmia to make a comeback just yet. “Since XBB is part of the omicron group, I expect that loss of taste and smell will not be common, but I have not seen data yet,” said Dr. Thomas Campbell, a professor in the department of infectious disease at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.


Author HuffPost | Publish Date January 06, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Death by Ableism

This Perspective article by Megan A. Morris, PhD, MPH, is a meditation on her Uncle David’s medical care at the end of his life and how a hospital team recommended care that was “steeped in unwitting ableism – the notion that the life of a person with a disability has less value than the life of a person without a disability.”


Full Story

Press Coverage

Heart doctor explains what could have caused Damar Hamlin’s cardiac arrest

Wendy Tzou is Associate Professor of Medicine and the Medical Director of Cardiac Electrophysiology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and was watching the game when Hamlin collapsed. The Conversation asked Tzou four questions about what may have happened.


Author KSDK | Publish Date January 04, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Commotio cordis: What is the rare phenomenon?

“Commotio cordis is a very rare cause of sudden cardiac death, primarily in athletes, or anybody who receives blunt force trauma to your chest, right over your heart,” said Bill Cornwell, the director of the Sports Cardiology Clinic at UCHealth. “Somebody drops suddenly because they have a bad rhythm that is not compatible with life. And unless somebody intervenes very quickly, they will likely pass away.”


Author Denver 7 | Publish Date January 04, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado doctor highlights the need for cultural representation in the medical field

Jennifer Taylor-Cousar, a pediatric and adult pulmonologist at National Jewish Health [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], is committed to creating systemic racial change for patients in the medical field... This past summer, she was the keynote speaker at the white coats for black lives ”die in” event at CU Anschutz Medical Campus to spread awareness about the health inequities in the American medical system.


Author Rocky Mountain PBS | Publish Date January 04, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Hydration can significantly impact your physical health, study finds

“The most impressive finding is that this risk (for chronic diseases and aging) is apparent even in individuals who have serum sodium levels that are on the upper end of the ‘normal range,’” said Richard Johnson, professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, via email. He was not involved in the study. “This challenges the question of what is really normal, and supports the concept that as a population we are probably not drinking enough water.”


Author CNN | Publish Date January 02, 2023
Full Story

Press Coverage

Engineering for Grief

A perspective piece in the The New England Journal of Medicine by Mark Earnest, MD, PhD, that describes a tool his father, a human process engineer, used in the days, weeks and years after losing his wife to cancer.


Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado Considers Changing Its Red Flag Law After Mass Shooting at Nightclub

“The ones that are petitioned for by law enforcement were approved more than 90% of the time, whereas the ones that are petitioned by family members, cohabitants, or parents were approved less than a third of the time,” said Chris Knoepke, a gun safety researcher with the University of Colorado’s Firearm Injury Prevention Initiative.


Author Kaiser Health News | Publish Date December 23, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

A bacterial culprit for rheumatoid arthritis

Rheumatologist and researcher Kristi Kuhn, MD, PhD, and her research team at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have identified a species of Subdoligranulum that could drive the development of rheumatoid arthritis.


Author Drug Discovery News | Publish Date December 23, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Pandemic fueled alcohol abuse, especially among women, but there are treatment options

The series “This Is Life With Lisa Ling” explores alcoholism in America.

“Last year, I took care of two women who were in their early 20s who had cirrhosis and needed liver transplants, and I’ve never seen that before in my entire career,” Dr. James Burton, medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora, told Ling.


Author CNN | Publish Date December 18, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

First Chief Well-Being Officer Joins University of Colorado School of Medicine

Lotte Dyrbye is the first to hold this newly created position as Senior Assoc. Dean of Faculty and Chief Well-being Officer for CU School of Medicine. She will oversee faculty development programs and lead initiatives that will reduce burnout among physicians, residents, and medical students.


Author DMSG Healthcare Podcast | Publish Date December 13, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

To Access Assisted Living or Elder Care, Some LGBTQIA+ Older Adults Go Back Into the Closet

Carey Candrian, a researcher and associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, calls this phenomenon a “habit of silence.” Candrian’s work focuses on how communication can impact health care outcomes, especially for older LGBTQIA+ adults and their caregivers. “If you grew up in this culture — where you were really trained to stay silent about who you were — of course over the years, if you continue to have these experiences you’re going to continue to stay silent,” Candrian said.


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date December 13, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Doctors raise concerns over growing number of respiratory illness cases in Colorado

“Unfortunately, there is no shot for RSV but some of the things that you can do that will actually take care of all three of these viruses are simple,” said Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author KKTV | Publish Date December 12, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Biktarvy a Long-Term Option for Older Adults With HIV

Yet, the adverse events “are not surprising for an older adult population,” said Kristine Erlandson, an associate professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, in Aurora. She cited sleep disturbances as a common issue among older adults, “particularly over the long duration of follow-up in this study.”


Author Specialty Pharmacy Continuum | Publish Date December 09, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

More questions than answers for long COVID patients as the pandemic grinds into its third year

Even as that work ramps up, no one can say just how many Coloradans suffer from it. “I think it's very large numbers,” said Sarah Jolley, a researcher with CU Anschutz and medical director of the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic, one site of a national study looking at recovery after COVID.


Author CPR | Publish Date December 08, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Flu spiking in Southern Colorado

“Right now. This is probably one of the steepest mountains that I've seen probably ever in terms of how fast the cases are increasing,” said UCHealth Senior Medical Director of Infection Prevention Michelle Barron [professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author KOAA | Publish Date December 07, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

New cancer center coming to CU Anschutz

The University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Campus announced on Tuesday the creation of Katy O. and Paul M. Rady Esophageal and Gastric Center of Excellence, which begins work now on bolstering screening and surveillance programs, clinical trials, and finding grants and recruiting talent for new programs. The new center will be housed in CU’s existing cancer center at the Anschutz campus, a designated comprehensive cancer center in the Rocky Mountain region.


Author Denver Business Journal | Publish Date December 07, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

CRC Screening Decision Aid May Align Preferences With Benefits in Older Adults

Among participants with an intermediate health state, 44.7% of those in the intervention group preferred screening compared with 54.8% of those in the control group (P=0.22), and for those in a poor health state, these proportions were 38.7% versus 54.1% (P=0.08), reported Carmen L. Lewis, of the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora and colleagues.


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date December 06, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus launches new center to fight esophageal and gastric cancer

When Sachin Wani goes to work every day at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, it can often feel like he is fighting an uphill battle. Wani is a gastroenterologist and an interventional endoscopist, as well as a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Much of his work with patients involves diagnosing and treating cancer of the esophagus.


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date December 06, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Scientists Discover a Unique Gut Bacteria That May Cause Arthritis

Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have found that a unique bacteria found in the gut may be responsible for causing rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in patients who are already predisposed to the autoimmune disease. A group of researchers from the Division of Rheumatology worked on the study under the leadership of Kristine Kuhn, an associate professor of rheumatology. The study was recently published in the journal Science Translational Medicine. Meagan Chriswell, a medical student at CU, is the paper’s lead author.


Author SciTech Daily | Publish Date December 05, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Flu season is back in Colorado with a vengeance

“We are officially in respiratory virus season. That includes everything you can think of from the common cold to more severe illnesses, and it has begun with a vengeance,” Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth, said.


Author Colorado Springs Gazette | Publish Date December 05, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

“Concerning trends” of respiratory illness across CO

Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said now more than ever, it’s important to take precautions to keep people out of the hospital.


Author Fox 21 | Publish Date December 05, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

What Cancer Does Dustin Have?

Erin Schenk, MD, PhD, [assistant professor of medicine and] a member of the University of Colorado Cancer Center, states that small cell carcinoma — rare cancer that often spreads aggressively and has no associated screening procedure — is a reminder of how much work remains for medical professionals in the fight against cancer.


Author Invest Records | Publish Date December 04, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Tips to avoid holiday weight gain (for humans)

Richard Johnson, professor of medicine and chief kidney disease specialist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, studies the causes of obesity. He’s identified a major part of the modern diet that makes our bodies behave as if we were adding fat as insurance against starvation later on, a process inherited from our evolutionary ancestors.


Author The Hill | Publish Date December 02, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Respiratory illnesses spiking in Colorado

“If you look at the trajectory so far, in the last month we really started seeing the uptick in cases and how quickly it went up. It’s higher than anything we’ve seen even pre-pandemic,” said Michelle Barron, Senior Medical Director of Infection Prevention at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].


Author KKTV | Publish Date December 02, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Great Sand Dunes National Park Once Again Requiring Masks Indoors

Michelle Barron, an infectious disease expert at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], also pointed to the dropping temperatures as another catalyst. The recent winter weather has pushed more folks inside for longer, creating higher risk for contagion. “Respiratory viral season has begun, and it’s begun with a vengeance,” she said. “It’s what we see with the changing seasons, right?”


Author Outdoors | Publish Date December 01, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Signs You May Have Diabetes and When to Seek Help

"Although COVID-19 is a pandemic, overweight/obesity is becoming the most common chronic disease 'pandemic' in the world," says Robert Eckel, professor of medicine emeritus at the University of Colorado School of Medicine Anschutz Medical Campus and immediate past president of the American Diabetes Association (ADA). “Obesity is the most important predictor of new onset type 2 diabetes.”


Author Yahoo News | Publish Date December 01, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

8 tips to avoid getting your family sick during holiday travel

Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention at UC Health [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] in Colorado, said this time of year often brings norovirus outbreaks as well. “People have been talking about the ‘tripledemic’” — referring to covid, flu and RSV, a common virus that usually causes mild, cold-like symptoms — “I’m like no, this is just the season of grossness,” she said.


Author Washington Post | Publish Date November 23, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Doctors who would like to defy abortion laws say it’s too risky

Another example: the Texas Policy Evaluation Project conducted a survey of clinicians operating under that state’s restrictions. It found that sometimes providers avoided doing D&Cs, opting instead for a surgical incision into the uterus because it might not be constructed as an abortion. “That’s just nuts.” Matthew Wynia directs the Center for Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Colorado. “Much more dangerous, much more risky. The woman may never have another pregnancy now because you’re trying to avoid being accused of having conducted an abortion.”


Author NPR | Publish Date November 22, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Red flag laws are only as effective as the frequency with which they get used

Christopher Knoepke, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, who has studied red flag laws both in Colorado and nationwide, worries the state law is a valuable tool that is being underutilized.


Author Denver Gazette | Publish Date November 22, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

“Tipping point” feared as rising flu, COVID-19 add to RSV’s strain on Colorado hospitals

Clinics in the UCHealth system recorded 1,160 positive tests for influenza in the last week, which was a “huge jump” from 495 cases a week earlier, said Michelle Barron, the system’s senior medical director of infection prevention and control [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine].

Connie Price, chief medical officer at Denver Health [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine], said they’re working to hire traveling nurses with experience in pediatric intensive care units, to better manage the increased need. Since young children have very small airways, they’re vulnerable to breathing complications from RSV, and some need to be placed on ventilators, she said.


Author The Denver Post | Publish Date November 21, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

‘Red flag’ gun laws in focus after attack at Colorado LGBTQ nightclub

The state has seen relatively few petitions for extreme risk protection orders since it passed its law in January 2020. One study found 109 filings in the first year. Chris Knoepke, a University of Colorado professor who has studied the issue, said data from 2021 and 2022 show a slight increase in usage. . . . “It’s heartbreaking when you hear one of these stories, and you worry that an opportunity was missed to potentially do something about it,” said Knoepke, who is working with state officials on developing training on ERPOs for Colorado law enforcement.


Author Reuters | Publish Date November 21, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Denver to review warming center policy after criticism over outdated guidelines

“There’s not a whole lot of evidence for that 10 degrees cut-off and we know that bad things can start happening to the body even in moderately, low temperatures, 40 degrees and below,” said Joshua Barocas, associate professor of medicine and infectious diseases physician at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author CBS News | Publish Date November 17, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Weight Loss Pills, Past and Present: How They Work, Safety, and More

All of the medications approved in the last decade have a good track record of safety so far, says Adam Gilden, an associate professor and obesity researcher at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author Everyday Health | Publish Date November 16, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Colorado begins Ebola monitoring for people traveling from certain African countries

“Mortality is high,” said Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “Somewhere between 40 and 50% of people who get it die. So, this is not insignificant.”


Author CBS News | Publish Date November 16, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Could you have diabetes? Your dental health may be an indicator.

“The rate of diabetes or incidence of diabetes is increasing annually by about 2 million people per year in the United States,” according to Mike McDermott, director of the Endocrinology and Diabetes Practice at University of Colorado Hospital [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “It’s huge and we’re increasing at a rapid rate.”


Author Broomfield Leader | Publish Date November 15, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

CU Anschutz launches new program aimed at involving older adults in clinical trials

Kathryn Nearing, [assistant professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] helped create the program and says there is a need for more participation from older adults in clinical trials to help create more research and awareness. “Older adults are one population of the group that’s under-represented in research.” Nearing said. “What that means is the research we conduct may not be as beneficial or as useful for those populations.”


Author 9News | Publish Date November 15, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Rapids announce new jersey sponsor

“UCHealth provides expert medical care and advanced treatment options, but our ultimate goal is to keep our communities healthy and out of the hospital,” said Abigail Lara, UCHealth’s medical director of health equity and associate professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.


Author 9News | Publish Date November 14, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Fall Viruses are Hitting with a Vengeance. Tips for a Healthier Holiday Season

“We are officially in respiratory viral season. That includes everything you can think of from the common cold to more severe illnesses, and it has begun with a vengeance,” said Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth [professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] and one of the top infectious disease experts in Colorado.


Author Loveland Magazine | Publish Date November 13, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

More studies needed to compare weight loss with morning vs. evening physical activity

During a symposium on the timing of physical activity at ObesityWeek 2022, Seth Creasy, assistant professor of medicine in the division of endocrinology, metabolism and diabetes at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, discussed the results of a trial in which 33 adults completed four exercise sessions per week for 15 weeks, with one group exercising exclusively in the morning and the other group exercising only during the evening.


Author Healio | Publish Date November 11, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Why not be fearless when fighting a global pandemic?

CU Anschutz's Dr. Michelle Barron battles the COVID-19 pandemic on the front lines and keeps smiling despite the challenges.


Author Office of Advancement | Publish Date November 10, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Thomas Flaig, MD, on Novel Combination Therapy for Advanced Urothelial Cancer

In the following interview, co-author Thomas Flaig, vice chancellor for research for the University of Colorado Denver and the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, discussed details of the study and the drug combination.


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date November 07, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Definitive Answer on Steroids for Infant Heart Surgery Falls Short

“Wow,” said Larry Allen, of the University of Colorado in Aurora, in discussing the results at an AHA press conference. “Such borderline results in medicine are common and can be challenging to implement. But I would suggest that the use of steroids based on the based on this study seems reasonable.”


Author MedPage Today | Publish Date November 07, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Opinion: LGBTQ citizens are being told they don’t matter

Column by Carey Candrian, an associate professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine: “The fear of rejection and mistreatment is valid: according to the American Heart Association, 56% of LGBTQ adults in 2021 experienced discrimination from a healthcare professional. Seventy percent of trans or gender non-conforming adults did so.”


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date November 04, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

The last two winters in Colorado saw COVID surges. Are there signs of a 3rd big wave in a row?

Michelle Barron, an infectious disease expert at UCHealth [and professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] said the increases come as other respiratory bugs, like flu and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), are spreading widely. “Respiratory viral season has begun, and it’s begun with a vengeance,” she said, noting cases generally trend upward as the weather cools and people spend more time together indoors. “It’s what we see with the changing seasons, right?”


Author CPR | Publish Date November 04, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Higher Plant-Based Protein Intake Tied With Higher Cognitive Function in CKD

Cognitive function tends to worsen as kidney function declines, Jessica Kendrick, of the University of Colorado [Anschutz Medical Campus] and colleagues explained.


Author Renal & Urology News | Publish Date November 03, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

COVID-19 is still a ‘dangerous global health threat.’ A new international study spells out how we can end it

The pandemic is still disproportionately impacting vulnerable populations, and without addressing the inequities involved, it will continue to be a public health threat around the world, said Joshua Barocas, co-author on the paper and associate professor of infectious disease and internal medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz.


Author CU Boulder Today | Publish Date November 03, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Medicaid denials for Colorado children with severe disabilities set off “sheer panic” among parents

“It’s urgent that this happen,” said board member Barry Martin, a physician at University of Colorado Hospital [and associate professor of clinical practice of medicine at CU School of Medicine]. “For these families, it sounds like it really needs to happen immediately.”


Author The Colorado Sun | Publish Date October 28, 2022
Full Story

Research    Press Coverage

Newly discovered species of bacteria in the microbiome may be a culprit behind rheumatoid arthritis

A recently published study co-authored by Kristen Demoruelle, Kevin Deane, V. Michael Holers and Kristi Kuhn, medicine faculty in the University of Colorado School of Medicine's Division of Rheumatology, revealed an important clue to a potential culprit behind this disease: the bacteria in your gut.


Author The Conversation | Publish Date October 27, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway Addresses Integrating ASCVD and Multimorbidity Treatment

ACC's newest Expert Consensus Decision Pathway offers a comprehensive and integrative framework for treating patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and multimorbidity. The document, with a writing committee co-chaired by Larry Allen, MD, FACC and including Marc Bonaca, MD, FACC from the University of Colorado School of Medicine's Division of Cardiology, published Oct. 25 in JACC. It encourages making treatment decisions for patients based on life expectancy and "4-domains" of medical, mind and emotion, physical functioning, and social and physician environment.


Full Story

Press Coverage

The link between childcare stress and physician burnout with Elizabeth Harry, MD

In today’s AMA Update, Elizabeth Harry, senior medical director of well-being at UCHealth [and associate professor of medicine at CU School of Medicine] in Aurora, Colorado, joins to discuss the connection between high childcare stress and burnout among health care workers during the pandemic.


Author AMA | Publish Date October 24, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

Worse COVID Outcomes Seen With Gout, Particularly in Women

Kevin D. Deane, associate professor of medicine and chair in rheumatology research at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, advises physicians to keep in mind other conditions linked with increased risk for severe COVID-19, including advanced age, heart, lung, or kidney problems, and autoimmune diseases.


Author Medscape | Publish Date October 24, 2022
Full Story

Press Coverage

VIDEO: Cardiometabolic health management in older adults important

Robert H. Eckel, emeritus professor of medicine in the divisions of cardiology and endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism, former professor of physiology and biophysics, Charles A. Boettcher II Chair in Atherosclerosis at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and past president of the American Heart Association, said the first day’s focus on cardiometabolic health in older adults brought a number of issues related to the elderly population to the forefront.


Author Healio | Publish Date October 21, 2022
Full Story

Department of Medicine News & Stories

Department of Medicine In the News

Healio

Nearly 25% of patients with chronic kidney disease meet gout criteria

news outletHealio
Publish DateApril 23, 2024

“Better recognition and improved management of patients with the coincidence of gout and chronic kidney disease is essential to improve patient outcomes,” Richard J. Johnson, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, and study co-author, told Healio.

Full Story
Los Angeles Blade

New study: LGBT adults face more discrimination in health care

news outletLos Angeles Blade
Publish DateApril 23, 2024

A recent study conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), a nonpartisan health policy research organization, reveals that LGBTQ+ patients face discrimination at higher rates than non-LGBT patients.

Full Story
CPR

Despite improvements, Hispanic Coloradans are still more likely to face significant health disparities

news outletCPR
Publish DateApril 21, 2024

Gaping disparities in health care leaves Hispanic Coloradans experiencing the lowest health system performance when compared with other racial and ethnic groups in the state.

Full Story
HCP Live

Cognitive Function Scores in Patients with CKD Vary by Sex, Disease Severity

news outletHCP Live
Publish DateApril 15, 2024

Findings from a recent study are calling attention to notable deficits in fluid cognition, dexterity, and total cognition among individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD), further detailing differences in cognitive function scores based on sex and CKD stage.

Full Story