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  1. Color Health - Cancer detection and care

    Color provides a more connected, direct, and proactive approach by assessing cancer risk and making screening more accessible, accelerating time to diagnosis, guiding patients through …

  2. Genetic Testing - Color Health

    Nov 18, 2015 · Color’s cancer, heart, and medication health areas focus on genetic results that have clear next steps for you and your doctor**. Easy and supported Color can send reports to …

  3. Color Support

    Information related to Color’s screening program for breast cancer, cervical cancer, prostate cancer, colorectal cancer, lung cancer, skin cancer, and heart health disease

  4. Genetic Testing – Color Support

    Do I have to pay for Color’s genetic test? How do I do a genetic test at home? How do I connect my sample with my account online for my at-home genetic test? How do I collect my saliva …

  5. Health Plans - Color Health

    Color intervenes with physician-led care to take action at every step of cancer—including earlier diagnosis, when treatment costs are on average 75% lower and survival rates are 6-8x higher.

  6. Genetics: For Clients | Color Support

    What are the methods and limitations of the Color Medication Response Genetic Test? What is Color Discovery? Can I receive information about my ancestry from Color?

  7. About Us - Color Health

    Color Health launches its first product to help make healthcare more affordable, accessible, and actionable. In 2015, Color launched with a new clinical genetic testing model to help patients …

  8. What is the Hereditary Cancer Test? – Color Support

    Women and men who use Color will learn about their genetic risk for hereditary breast, colorectal, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, stomach, and uterine cancers. This information is …

  9. Program Resources - Color Health

    Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) Testing for Color’s Prostate Cancer Screening Programs

  10. Partnerships - Color Health

    Color is responsible for variant detection and interpretation as an initial step for the return of health-related genetic information to one million or more people living in the United States. …