The mission of University Health is to deliver essential public health services and community-based medical care across the state of Texas, with a focus on accessible, equitable, and sustainable healthcare delivery. Strategic priorities center on strengthening clinical infrastructure, expanding preventive care programs, and supporting workforce development in underserved regions.
University Health is a government agency with procurement activity across contracts, awards, and contractors. It currently has 43 open contract opportunities.
Spending trends, top contractors, industry breakdown, and recent contract activity.
AI Mission Profile
The mission of University Health is to deliver essential public health services and community-based medical care across the state of Texas, with a focus on accessible, equitable, and sustainable healthcare delivery. Strategic priorities center on strengthening clinical infrastructure, expanding prev...
The mission of University Health is to deliver essential public health services and community-based medical care across the state of Texas, with a focus on accessible, equitable, and sustainable healthcare delivery. Strategic priorities center on strengthening clinical infrastructure, expanding preventive care programs, and supporting workforce development in underserved regions. Key initiatives include modernizing patient information systems, enhancing emergency response capabilities, and ensuring continuity of care for vulnerable populations through integrated service networks. The agency prioritizes operational resilience and public health preparedness, aligning procurement efforts with state-wide health equity goals.
Procurement patterns indicate a consistent demand for clinical support services, medical equipment maintenance, health information technology systems, and facility operations contracts. The agency frequently utilizes indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) vehicles and government-wide acquisition contracts (GWACs) to streamline procurement of recurring healthcare and administrative services. Contract structures often include performance-based specifications to ensure quality outcomes in patient care delivery.
Industry preferences cannot be determined due to insufficient procurement data. No specific NAICS categories or set-aside preferences are evident from available records. The agency’s vendor engagement appears to be guided by operational needs rather than targeted diversity initiatives, though no formal preferences are documented.
University Health operates as a state-level public health entity under the Texas Department of Health, serving communities statewide with no fixed geographic boundary. It functions as a decentralized network of clinics, outreach centers, and mobile health units, leveraging cooperative purchasing agreements and state-wide master contracts to support its distributed service model. Procurement is conducted through standardized state procurement protocols designed for efficiency and compliance with Texas administrative codes.
Organizational divisions and offices within University Health that manage their own procurement activities.