Colorado
Colorado sees a drop in life expectancy not seen since WWII, driven by COVID and overdose deaths
Life expectancy dropped in Colorado for the second straight 12 months in 2021. It’s the type of decline, pushed by the pandemic, not seen in a long time, knowledge from the state well being division present.
The common life expectancy for Colorado residents fell to 78 years in 2021. That is barely decrease than 2020, the primary 12 months of the pandemic when it was 78.4 years, however the slide represents a persistent and vital drop of almost three years in comparison with 2019.
“The final time life expectancy dropped like this was in 1943, which was essentially the most deadly 12 months of World Struggle II, for the nation,” stated Dr. Eric France, the state’s chief medical officer. “It’s tragic that we see life expectancy drop. Demise charges elevated by 20 p.c.”
Key drivers for the decline had been COVID-19 and overdose deaths.
The information differ by demographic group. COVID-19 was the main reason for loss of life amongst Hispanics, in addition to non-Hispanic Native Hawaiian/Different Pacific Islanders and American Indian/Native Alaskans, the info present.
Dr. Lilia Cervantes, an affiliate professor within the Division of Drugs on the College of Colorado College of Drugs, stated she wasn’t shocked by the brand new numbers.
“The Latino neighborhood makes up the vast majority of the important workforce,” stated Cervantes, who’s a member of the Colorado Vaccine Fairness Taskforce. “Throughout COVID, they have been the least protected. They’ve not been capable of keep away from public transportation. They’ve needed to proceed working typically even whereas unwell and are the least prone to have healthcare protection.”
Vaccination charges for Hispanics, the time period utilized in state and federal well being research, lag different teams, each in Colorado and nationally.
The information mirror nationwide tendencies.
American Indians and Alaska Natives confronted comparable population-level well being challenges. Each communities entered the pandemic with “longstanding pre-existing well being disparities that made them particularly susceptible to extra extreme COVID sickness and loss of life,” stated Michelle Sarche, a licensed scientific psychologist and affiliate professor within the Facilities for American Indian & Alaska Native Well being and Division of Group & Behavioral Well being on the Colorado College of Public Well being.
She famous many tribal communities face underlying well being challenges, together with “insufficient entry to healthcare, training, reasonably priced and adequate housing, and financial alternative, all of that are treaty rights and belief obligations that the USA, in its personal evaluation, has didn’t uphold.”
As troubling as these knowledge are, although, it’s vital to inform the entire story,” certainly one of resilience, resistance and survival,” stated Sarche, a member of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of the Ojibwe tribe.
American Indian and Alaska Native communities “instituted a few of the most profitable vaccine campaigns,” she stated. “They marshaled monumental assets to guard their communities, and essentially the most susceptible amongst them — together with elders,” bearers of native language and tradition for youthful generations.
Cervantes additionally harassed the resilience of Hispanic communities throughout the pandemic and spotlighted modifications that might assist down the street.
She stated international locations with comparable wealth because the U.S. present extra complete social providers and assure well being care. She thinks a latest push to cowl all Coloradans and make healthcare extra reasonably priced might assist.
“Colorado, I really feel like, is creating change to make it in order that entry to healthcare protection relies upon much less on immigration standing and socioeconomic standing,” she stated.
The general life expectancy amongst Colorado residents was 78.4 years in 2020 (81.0 years for females, 76.0 years for males) and 78.0 years in 2021 (80.9 years for females and 75.2 years for males), based on the Colorado Division of Public Well being and Surroundings. That’s primarily based on remaining loss of life certificates knowledge for 2020 and 2021, and improved inhabitants estimates for each years.
COVID-19 remained the third main reason for loss of life amongst Colorado residents in 2021, because it was in 2020, the well being division discovered. Amongst non-Hispanic Black/African People, Asians, and whites, COVID-19 was the third main reason for loss of life.
Unintentional accidents, which embrace all unintentional drug overdoses, motorized vehicle accidents, and falls, remained the fourth main reason for loss of life amongst Colorado residents in 2021, whereas suicide remained the eighth main trigger, and murder moved from seventeenth to sixteenth main trigger. Continual ailments proceed to make up the rest of the main causes of loss of life.
“The largest driver of the will increase in drug overdose deaths up to now few years has certainly been fentanyl,” stated Kirk Bol, the state’s Important Statistics Program supervisor. Fentanyl is a robust artificial opioid just like morphine however 50 to 100 occasions stronger. It is more and more being present in different medicine laced with fentanyl, inflicting customers to overdose by chance.
In 2017, the state recorded 81 fentanyl deaths. In 2021, the quantity rose to 912, half of all overdose deaths. Bol known as it a “surprising improve.”
In 2021, there have been 1,881 whole drug overdose deaths amongst Colorado residents — a rise in comparison with the 1,477 deaths recorded in 2020. The best improve concerned fentanyl, which soared from 540 in 2020 to 912. Will increase had been additionally noticed in overdose deaths involving methamphetamine and cocaine, whereas small declines had been seen in overdose deaths involving heroin.
Colorado
Avalanche Acquire Parssinen From Nashville | Colorado Avalanche
The Colorado Avalanche Hockey Club announced today the team has acquired forward Juuso Parssinen and a seventh-round pick (previously acquired from the New York Rangers) in the 2026 NHL Draft from the Nashville Predators in exchange for forward Ondrej Pavel and Colorado’s third-round pick in the 2027 Draft.
Parssinen, 23, has suited up in 15 games for the Predators in 2024-25 and registered five points (2g/3a). Four of those five points came over a four-game point streak from Nov. 6-11 while also scoring in back-to-back games to begin that span. The forward also played in his 100th career NHL game on Nov. 17 in Vancouver.
A native of Hameenlinna, Finland, Parssinen has registered 42 career points (16g/26a) in 104 NHL games from 2022-25, all with the Predators. His 2022-23 saw him post season-highs in games (45), assists (19), points (25) and game-winning tallies (3), while last season he registered eight goals to set a personal-best. Parssinen also suited up in Game 6 of the First Round in the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs, his lone NHL postseason appearance.
Additional professional experience for Parssinen includes 46 AHL games with the Milwaukee Admirals over parts of the 2021-24 seasons as well as four Liiga campaigns for TPS from 2018-22, competing in 134 regular-season contests. The 6-foot-3, 212-pound forward has registered 34 career AHL points (9g/25a) and suited up in 14 Calder Cup Playoff tilts last season, chipping in nine points (1g/8a) to rank tied for second on the club in assists.
On an international level, Parssinen captured bronze at the IIHF World Junior Championship with Finland in 2021. He was originally selected by the Predators in the seventh round (210th overall) in the 2019 NHL Draft.
Pavel signed with Colorado as a college free agent on March 30, 2023 and appeared in two NHL games for the Avalanche (Nov. 7, 2023 and March 6, 2024). He suited up in 77 games for the Colorado Eagles (AHL) over parts of the 2022-25 seasons and tallied 12 points (6g/6a).
Colorado
Four Reasons BYU Can Win the Alamo Bowl Over Colorado
Let’s be honest, if this was an independence era bowl game, BYU fans would be throwing a parade down Center Street. A standalone Saturday night game on ABC against a ranked Colorado team and Heisman Trophy winner in Travis Hunter might be a top five BYU bowl game. Of course everyone wanted to face Colorado in a Big 12 title game, but I guess fans will have to settle for this. Bummer (heavy sarcasm).
A BYU win over Colorado would go a long way to take the sting off a disappointing end to an otherwise magical season. A win tonight secures an 11-win season, a top-15 ranking, and enough offseason momentum to likely earn BYU a preseason ranking that unfortunately matters a lot more than you think. Here are four reasons I think BYU gets that done.
Advanced analytics think this is a good matchup for BYU. BYU’s offense is 22nd and expected points added (EPA) per rush compared to 43rd for Colorado’s defense against the run. Meanwhile, BYU’s defense ranks 27th in EPA per rush and 12th in EPA per drop back compared to 73rd and 25th respectively for Colorado’s offense. The only EPA edge Colorado holds is their 24th national ranking in defensive EPA per drop back compared to 36th for BYU’s offense. BYU is also 14th nationally in net yards per play compared to 27th. In less data nerd speak, BYU generates bigger plays than Colorado on average on a per-play basis. The task then becomes whether Jake Retzlaff can continue to generate the big plays without the costly mistakes that plagued BYU in the month of November.
You would be hard pressed to find a quarterback who has been under more pressure this season than Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders. Colorado ranks 124th nationally in sacks allowed (3.5 per game) while allowing QB hurries on over a third of Sanders’ drop backs. When pressured, Sanders’ completion percentage drops from 80% to 54% while his turnover play rate nearly doubles. Most alarmingly for Colorado, over 20% of pressures allowed turn into sacks. That is welcome news for a BYU defense that has been able to put pressure on quarterbacks all season, but has struggled to get home on opposing quarterbacks. If BYU can get Colorado off schedule with QB pressure on early downs, Colorado’s 39% 3rd/4th down conversion rate won’t be enough to keep Colorado’s high-flying offense on the field.
You may not like it, but sometimes the easiest way to play defense is to never let an opposing offense get on the field. If any team is good at that, it’s BYU. BYU is the 3rd best offense in the country at generating drives that reach scoring position and 23rd in available yards gained per drive. Translation: BYU moves the ball as well as anyone in the country. The struggles have come with red zone execution over the last month with boneheaded mistakes and turnovers. BYU will be able to keep Colorado’s offense off the field for long stretches with a consistent run game. Whether they win or not will come down to whether they can capitalize with touchdowns on those long drives like they did early in the season.
Colorado ranks dead last nationally in rush yards per game (71) and third to last in yards per rush (2.6). I don’t think that gets any better against a BYU defense that ranks top 50 in both. Instead of the run game, Colorado has relied on the quick passing game to fill the void left by an ineffective run game. Over 60% of Sanders’ passes travel 10 yards or less with a nearly 20% screen rate. These throws are incredibly efficient for Colorado, as nearly 90% of these throws are completed to a plethora of elusive wide receivers led by Heisman trophy winner Travis Hunter with space to work.
BYU’s ability to tackle in space on the edges will be vital. BYU is stronger in this regard than you think. BYU’s linebacking trio of Jack Kelly, Isaiah Glasker, and Harrison Taggart all have exceptional speed while 3 of BYU’s top 4 cornerbacks all have tackling grades above 70 on PFF. If BYU can limit the screen game and force Colorado into higher risk throws down field, there will be more opportunities for an elite BYU secondary to make the game changing plays they have made all season long.
If BYU’s pass rush can’t get to Shedeur Sanders and BYU turns the ball over multiple times, this game could snowball in the wrong direction. On the flip side, if BYU plays successful and clean run-centric football, Travis Hunter and Shedeur Sanders won’t be on the field enough to do any real damage.
Teams that beat Colorado are teams that run the football. Nebraska, Kansas and Kansas State combined to run for 665 yards and were +40 in combined time of possession. That is BYU’s path to victory. BYU won’t run for 330 yards like Kansas did, but they can match the 150-mark put up by Nebraska. BYU has averaged 172.5 yards rushing per game over their last 8 games and with at least 2 9+ play drives in every game over that span. Don’t overcomplicate it. Run the [redacted] ball and let Jay Hill and LJ Martin take BYU to their second 11-win season in the last 15 years.
BYU 27 – Colorado 24
Colorado
Busy slopes and messy roads: Colorado mountains bracing for snowy holiday weekend
SILVERTHORNE, Colo. — Multiple rounds of mountain snow mean it will likely be a crowded holiday weekend for skiers and boarders on the slopes, and for those driving up into the high country.
By Monday, a foot of snow is possible along the Interstate 70 drive. The area around Steamboat Springs and Rabbit Ears Pass is under a Winter Storm Warning and could see even more.
DENVER WEATHER LINKS: Hourly forecast | Radars | Traffic | Weather Page | 24/7 Weather Stream
Denver7 Weather
Shops like Blue Valley Ski and Board Rentals in Silverthorne were packed on Friday.
“Today, we sent out our biggest day of the season so far,” said owner Mo Esch. “We were sold out for a while [today].”
Esch said that only happens a couple of times a season.
This holiday weekend between Christmas and New Year’s has led people to his business from as far as the Southern U.S., and even the Southern Hemisphere.
“Lot of Alabama, a lot of Louisiana,” Esch said of Friday’s customers. “Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, New Jersey, New York, Argentina, Mexico, lots of places.”
Still, there are many more who will be making the drive up this weekend. The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) is warning them to plan ahead.
“What we are hearing is that there are going to be waves of snow this weekend, fairly moderate snow that we’re expecting,” said Lisa Schwantes, regional communications manager for CDOT.
“Travel during the daylight hours, if you can, because the cold temperatures will definitely impact and affect the roadway. So it could freeze up, get slick out there,” she advised. “So if you can avoid travel at night, I would do that.”
CDOT advises everyone to take extra time and extra emergency items with them, like food, water, a blanket, a snow shovel and a flashlight.
The department also urges everyone, especially commercial drivers, to obey chain laws. Drivers who do not are often involved in slide-offs and pile-ups that can snarl traffic and prevent plows from getting through, according to Schwantes.
The extra precautions are worth it to safely enjoy spending the holidays in the Colorado mountains.
“I hardly remember any of the Christmas presents I got, but I remember every single ski vacation my family ever took,” Esch recalled. “It was really just something I hold near and dear to my heart. So that’s one of the reasons why I just, I like to share that with other people.”
The Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) is warning backcountry travelers to be careful, as this weekend’s heavy snow and high winds will bring high avalanche danger.
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