Denver Area Medical Staff Training For Potential Ebola Encounters
Doctors, nurses and other health workers are spending days learning how to protect themselves against contracting the Ebola virus, should it be diagnosed in Colorado.
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Doctors, nurses and other health workers are spending days learning how to protect themselves against contracting the Ebola virus, should it be diagnosed in Colorado.
A new treatment is helping prevent painful migraines -- and it's drug-free. The patient wears the device that looks like a high-tech headband once a day.
The Denver veterans hospital says it's doing more operations after resolving a cleaning problem that left trace mineral deposits on its stainless steel surgical instruments.
CBS4 has learned that Quest Diagnostics, the nation's largest diagnostic lab company, has told doctors, hospitals and health care providers nationwide the company will not accept blood samples suspected of being infected with Ebola.
Inside the Corgenix lab in Broomfield, revolutionary research is taking place on Ebola.
Could the massive Ebola outbreak be linked to bats? A researcher at Colorado State University thinks so.
Colorado hospitals are training staff to handle possible Ebola patients, but setting up the protocols is still a work in progress.
A church in Aurora is once again collecting supplies to help protect against the Ebola virus in West Africa, and the mission is personal for many members of the congregation.
Safeway and Volunteers of America teamed up over the weekend to give 1,000 flu shots for free.
The local Liberian community is gathering supplies in hopes of showing support for those overseas struggling with Ebola.
There's a new option at one hospital in Colorado for birthing mothers to ease the pain of labor: nitrous oxide.
University of Colorado researchers are working to develop a completely new form of birth control that would be safer and more effective for heavier women.
With the first case of Ebola diagnosed in the United States, focus on the deadly virus has increased. So has the focus on questions.
The threat of Ebola is changing the way emergency crews, hospitals and clinics do business across the country, and many in Colorado have instituted new protocols for handling a possible Ebola patient.
The CDC is urging airlines to take extra precautions and to keep an eye out for passengers who may show symptoms of Ebola, but for travelers at DIA it's been business as usual.
The bandstand at Denver's City Park was destroyed in an overnight fire, according to Denver fire officials and a nonprofit that uses the bandstand.
"A Shaving Grace Hairport," a barbershop kiosk located on Concourse B, is a first-of-its-kind concept designed specifically for an airport setting, offering grooming services in a fast, convenient format.
A measure would allow local governments to set the hours of operation for bars located in areas designated as Entertainment Districts.
In Broomfield, The Grove at Cottonwood is set to open to residents this summer as an affordable housing complex for those with intellectual or developmental disabilities. But as construction reaches the final months, RTD has denied Broomfield Housing Alliance's request for extended Access-a-Ride services to the complex.
A state investigation has found that a Denver assisted living facility took 13 minutes to locate a resident who collapsed and begin CPR -- failures regulators say placed all 125 residents in "immediate jeopardy."
Dr. Brooke Pengel, a Pediatric Orthopedic Specialist with HCA HealthONE Rocky Mountain Children's talks aboiut how common the injury is and why it is on the rise in one particular group of women.
New Catholic Archbishop James Golka is set to deliver his first mass in Denver at the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.
New endometriosis guidance means doctors can finally diagnose based on your symptoms alone — no surgery required. Dr. Abby Barnes is an OBGYN with HCA HealthONE Metro and talks about the importance of this diagnosis.
A measure by State Representatives Steve Woodrow and Anthony Hartsook would allow local governments to set the hours of operation for bars located in areas designated as Entertainment Districts.
Watch Alex Lehnert's forecast
For Denver Summit FC's Janine Sonis, returning home is a dream come true.
The Colorado Rockies will offer an eating and drinking challenge for fans at Coors Field this season.
The 31-year-old American matched Austrian downhill great Annemarie Moser-Pröll, who won her six titles in the 1970s.
The Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey team is preparing for a familiar quest.
Denver Summit FC captured its first point as a franchise with a 1-1 draw against the Orlando Pride last weekend. It's a milestone worth celebrating, but likely the first of many during its inaugural season.
The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, whose board is filled with the president's allies, announced Bill Maher will receive the prize in June.
Here's what to know about peptides, what they can and can't do, and what's driving viral claims about possible health benefits online.
The TSA's top official says the situation at U.S. airports could get even worse if the partial government shutdown that has frozen officers' paychecks continues.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren's bill would raise taxes on households worth more than $50 million and on billionaires.
FEMA will make $1 billion available for the BRIC program, which helps local governments harden against natural hazards like fires, floods, earthquakes and hurricanes.
A measure would allow local governments to set the hours of operation for bars located in areas designated as Entertainment Districts.
The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, whose board is filled with the president's allies, announced Bill Maher will receive the prize in June.
Justice Department lawyers said in the memo that it was a "regrettable error" to cite the memo in monthslong litigation.
The TSA's top official says the situation at U.S. airports could get even worse if the partial government shutdown that has frozen officers' paychecks continues.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren's bill would raise taxes on households worth more than $50 million and on billionaires.
Here's what to know about peptides, what they can and can't do, and what's driving viral claims about possible health benefits online.
There's a new dedicated space for teens and young adults to find a sense of normalcy while receiving medical treatment, and it's inspired by a former patient.
Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, head of the National Institutes of Health and interim leader of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told staff a permanent CDC director could be nominated soon. "I know that it has been such a difficult year," he said.
Federal health officials posted a warning about misleading statements by biotech billionaire Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong about his company's bladder cancer drug Anktiva.
A compound found in python blood could lead to a new kind of weight loss drug, one that suppresses appetite without some of the side effects linked to popular medications like Ozempic.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren's bill would raise taxes on households worth more than $50 million and on billionaires.
Skiers have filed a class action lawsuit against the two largest winter sports and resort companies, saying their price structures violate state and federal antitrust laws, like those used to prevent monopolies in other industries.
The U.S. Postal Service is raising some postage prices to help offset the federal agency's rising transportation costs as fuel prices surge.
With Social Security's trust fund sliding toward insolvency, one group wants to cap benefits for the wealthiest U.S. couples.
Summer gasoline regulations will be waived for 20 days, and possibly longer to try to ease gas prices.
A state investigation has found that a Denver assisted living facility took 13 minutes to locate a resident who collapsed and begin CPR -- failures regulators say placed all 125 residents in "immediate jeopardy."
Colorado's youth detention facilities are at the center of a civil rights lawsuit alleging that children are being kept beyond their court-ordered release dates. Advocates and families say the impact is irreversible.
One day after DIA's general counsel filed a federal lawsuit against the city and three of Mayor Mike Johnston's appointees -- alleging unethical and potentially illegal behavior, and claiming they were plotting to oust airport CEO Phil Washington -- one of the appointees, City Attorney Miko Brown, responded by saying of the claims in the lawsuit, "I know they're upsetting."
A woman whose aging mother was charged thousands of dollars to change a lock reached out to CBS Colorado in hopes that the station would help them get the money back.
A senior lawyer at Denver International Airport filed a federal lawsuit against the city and three top officials, claiming he was pushed out of his job after warning about possible alleged violations of law and more.