MCH Digest

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September 2025

Cooking Up Local Strategies Together

By Traci Pole, MPH and Kaylan Celestin, MPH


Working with Local Public Health feels both rich and sweet, like eating dark chocolate with a raspberry swirl. There is a culture that runs deep and pumps throughout the community to drive the recipe for creating impactful MCH programming. Several ingredients are staples to maintaining the consistency, but collaboration is the secret sauce to success. 


Over the past few months, the Test Kitchen Team, a team that includes both state and local partners, has been gathering around the table to shape the future of maternal and child health in Colorado. Local Public Health Partners and members of the MCH staff have been in the kitchen crafting a recipe to create a Local Strategy Summit. Like any great meal, the process has been fueled by collaboration, creativity, and the best local ingredients—ideas rooted in community wisdom and lived experience. 


The result so far? A kitchen buzzing with energy, full of promising ideas that can be scaled, adapted, and shared across Colorado communities. But the best part is still ahead.


The upcoming Local Strategy Summit will unfold in two parts, with an agenda designed to invite your expertise and collaboration. Together, we’ll co-create a full menu of strategies for the upcoming cycle—strategies that are practical, innovative, and tailored to local needs.


This is your invitation to pull up a chair, roll up your sleeves, and add your voice to the mix. Join us in just a few weeks to see what we’ve been cooking up—and to help us serve a healthy, connected future for children, families, and communities across the state.

Add Your Flavor: Join Us in the Test Kitchen, our partners at Local Public Health Agencies should register by September 22


With Gratitude, 

A member of the Test Kitchen Team 

Test Kitchen Team Members

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Mary Margaret Fouse-Bishop , JeffCo

Diana Albor, El Paso 

Megan Barry, DDPHE

Kelly Caldwell, Douglas County

Kaylan Celestin, CDPHE

Reid Bryan, CDPHE

Andrew Erhart, CDPHE 

Sarah Kay Moore, CDPHE 

Traci Pole, Contractor

Lorin Wakefield, CDPHE

Youth Suicide Rates See Decline Thanks to Upstream Efforts

By Kirstin Hoagland, Prosocial and Community Connectedness Specialist


If you’re new, I’m Kirstin, and I support the MCH social connectedness priority. I am grasping on to hope and joy wherever I can find it. At the end of August, the Office of Suicide Prevention released a statement about youth suicide in Colorado. The most current 2024 data shows the lowest youth suicide rate since 2007. In 2024, there were 39 suicide deaths among youth ages 10-18, resulting in a suicide rate of 5.85 deaths per 100,000 youth ages 10-18. That is down from the peak youth suicide rate in 2020 at 12.91 deaths per 100,000 youth, which represented 87 youth deaths by suicide that year.



Colorado’s MCH priorities and national performance measures are not specific to suicide; however the work you do builds protective factors and bolsters resilience that impacts and prevents suicide. Our collective MCH effort to focus upstream-- economic mobility, nutrition security, connectedness, access to care-- matters and does make a difference. I want to extend gratitude to you all, celebrate this moment, and support one another as we continue to work towards Colorado communities where all have what they need to experience lives worth living. Thank you for all you do, and I look forward to being in community together soon. 


September is Suicide Prevention Awareness month. I’ve included a list of national and Colorado-based resources for suicide and mental health support. 

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Events

APHA 2025. November 2 - 5, 2025. Washington, D.C. Registration for APHA is open.


AMCHP 2026. March 7 - 10, 2026. Washington, DC.

Training

CPHA Health Equity Sessions

This curated collection of virtual sessions highlights diverse voices, evidence-based insights, and actionable strategies that promote health equity across communities. Free for CPHA members, $5 for non-members.


Session 5: Reimagining Equity in Grantee/Philanthropy Relationships. September 25, 10:00am - 11:30am MT. Register for session 5.


Session 6: Cultivating Empathy and Equity in Public Health Practice. October 23, 11:30am - 1:00pm MT. Register for session 6.


Session 7: The History and Future of Cervical Cancer. November 5, 11:00am - 12:30pm MT. Register for session 7.


Session 8: Empowering Communities: Trauma-Informed and Inclusive Strategies. December 2, 5:30pm - 7:00pm MT. Register for session 8. (Featuring CAB member, Fatima Kiass!)


Session 9: Integrating an Antiracist Lens into Public Health Policy. December 15 12:30pm - 1:50pm MT. Register for session 9.

Data & Reports

New CIVHC Analysis Reveals Cost & Prevalence of Chronic Conditions Across Colorado

A new analysis from the Center for Improving Value in Health Care (CIVHC) shines a spotlight on the impact of chronic conditions in Colorado, uncovering stark insights into both the prevalence and cost of care associated with long-term illnesses. Drawing from the Colorado All Payer Claims Database (CO APCD), this analysis provides a comprehensive look at 30 chronic conditions over a seven-year span from 2017 to 2023.

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LPHA Corner

Arapahoe County Completes First Community Doula Training

In August, Arapahoe County’s Maternal Child Health Program hosted its first community doula training. Eight organizations nominated 22 participants for a four-day, bilingual training taught by Elephant Circle (a HCPF approved Doula Training Organization). The program strengthens perinatal support for families, especially those covered by Colorado’s new Medicaid doula benefit, while also creating accessible pathways into the doula workforce for community members who can provide culturally and linguistically relevant care.


Trainees described the experience as both personal and professional growth. One shared, “This training opened my eyes to how important it is to support and empower people so they can take an active role in their birth.” Another reflected, “During my pregnancies and after giving birth I was always alone. Now I understand how valuable it is to have someone by your side.”

 

With about 44% of the county’s 7,500 annual births covered by Medicaid, roughly 178 doulas would be needed to meet demand. This first cohort is being mentored as they work toward doula certification, Medicaid enrollment, and launching their practices. Twenty more people are already on the waitlist! Amazing job Arapahoe County in supporting workforce capacity for the perinatal population.

Participants of Arapahoe County’s Maternal Child Health Program first community doula training
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Grants and Other Funding

FY26 LPHA Chronic Disease Pilot Mini-Application Announcement

The State Tobacco Education, Prevention, and Cessation Grants Program (STEPP) at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), Prevention Services Division, released its mini-application for the Local Public Health Agencies Chronic Disease Pilot. The intent of this non-competitive mini-application process is for CDPHE to identify Local Public Health Agencies (LPHA) interested in piloting the LPHA Chronic Disease capacity building and evidence-based strategies outlined in the LPHA Chronic Disease Framework (opens PDF). 


CDPHE anticipates awarding grants for a three-year grant period and reserves the option to shorten or extend awards. This application process will assist CDPHE in program planning, identifying needed resources, and ensuring that adequate support and technical assistance are available to support funded Local Public Health Agencies.


Letters of interest are due to cdphe_hpcdp@state.co.us no later than 5 p.m. MDT on September 30, 2025. All application materials should be submitted no later than 5 p.m. MDT on October 17, 2025. Details for applying can be found on the application info page.

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Newsletters

Human Impact Partners News

Colorado Children’s Campaign KidsFlash Blog

Family Matters Newsletter

Public Health Foundation E-News

Our Voice: Colorado’s Early Childhood Newsletter

Maternal Wellness Newsletter

Want to read past MCH Digests?

Archived MCH Digests

The Title V Maternal and Child Health Program (MCH) works with statewide partners and local public health agency representatives to improve the health of Coloradans using population-based and infrastructure-building strategies. Our mission is to optimize the health and well-being of mothers and children by employing primary prevention and early intervention public health strategies.


This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under the Colorado Maternal and Child Health Block Grant 6 B04MC45202. This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government.

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