Our Impact

Why We Do What We Do

  • Maneuvering the healthcare system is challenging. You don’t have to do it alone.

  • Our team meets you where you are to get you the right care, at the right time, at the right place.

  • We remind people of the tools they have and support them when they need it most to overcome barriers.
Support, Help, Guidance

Changing Lives – Our 2024 Impact Report

In 2024, we advocated for and supported the health of our community by directly serving 680 clients through over 22,052 interactions. Our Direct Services impact has increased 47% in the past 5 years!

Plus, our efforts have a positive, indirect impact on so many more of our neighbors, because we are all healthier together. This illustrates the depth of the transformative work we do with and on behalf of our clients and community.

What does our work look like? How do we serve our community?

To learn more, check out our 2024 Impact Report here.

Barriers to Healthcare

Health Is More Than Health Care.

Access to care is important, but being truly healthy requires so much more.

At GCRHN, we know health is not uniformly attainable for everyone. Every year, we work to understand the barriers that keep our neighbors from living their healthiest lives.

National data shows other factors create barriers to care. These include:

  • Education
  • Income
  • Housing
  • Food access
  • Geography
  • Transportation
  • Language
  • Culture
  • Race
  • Age & Ability
Barriers to Health: Access 10%, Genetics 20%, Environment 20%, Healthy Behaviors 50%

Where Our Funding Goes

83 cents of every dollar goes to Programs & Services. Industry standard is 72 cents per dollar. 17 cents supports overhead & operational costs.100% of every dollar goes to OUR IMPACT to support our work now and in the future.

Why it Matters

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  • The health of our community is built on the health of each person.
  • These are OUR neighbors, employees, employers, teachers, servers, builders, etc.
  • Less missed work and school creates a healthier, thriving community.
  • Patient Navigator program saves money: in the healthcare system and for patients.

Our Emergency Response Impact

Over the years, Grand County has had various emergency situations where community members needed our organization’s help… and we delivered! Two such examples are the COVID-19 pandemic and the East Troublesome Fire of 2020.

Our Clients

We serve both Grand and Jackson Counties. Read more about who we serve.

Check out our Client Stories to learn more about how GCRHN can help. Click here to watch videos and read more about our clients.

Mark Davis
Bob
Lisa

Our Events

Find details about local events including our annual fundraising event

Health Resource Guide

Explore health resources available in Grand County at healthygrandcounty.org

Take Action

Donate, Volunteer, Advocate - help make a difference in healthcare in Grand County

Lisa’s Story

What spurred the creation of this video was simply a phone call made by a grateful client to someone on our Network staff, calling just to say "thank you" for our help. We were pleased that Lisa was willing to share her story of her "trials and tribulations" (as she...

Bob’s Story

Listen as Bob shares in the video about how he didn't realize he needed support until he met our Care Coordinator Team.

Maria’s Story

Following a car accident she was involved in, Maria (not her real name) was referred to the Grand County Rural Health Network by Middle Park Health’s Kremmling Clinic for financial assistance to obtain prescription medications due to severe injuries, including a blood...

Donna’s Story

Donna (not her real name) called our office in tears because she had lost her Medicaid coverage. Donna was worried because she wasn’t able to afford her prescriptions without her insurance and felt the stress of it all might cause her to relapse on alcohol. Donna was...

Mark’s Story

There is nowhere Mark Davis would rather live than the mountains of Colorado. Now 60 years old, Davis is a carpenter who specialized in remodeling houses in the Front Range and, later, in Grand County. For nearly 10 years, he lived near Grand Lake in an apartment with...