Office of Border Public Health
This page provides information about Office of Border Public Health .
Regional and Local Health Operations
-
-
- CSHCN
- Oral Health Services
- Drugs and Medical Devices
- Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
- Environmental Services
- Manufactured Foods
- Milk and Dairy Products
- Meat Safety Assurance
- Public Health Preparedness and Response
- Community Health Improvement
- Radiation Control
- STD and HIV Prevention
- Epidemiology and Surveillance
- Tuberculosis Elimination
- Tobacco Prevention and Control Program
- Texas Health Steps
- Community Health Worker
- Contacts
- Local Health Departments
-
-
-
- Community Health Improvement Program
- Environmental and Consumer Inspections Program
- Epidemiology Program
- HIV/STD Program
- Immunizations Program
- Public Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Program
- Public Health Improvement Strategies & Operations Program
- Public Health Nursing Program
- Specialized Health and Social Services Program
- Zoonosis Control Program
- Local Health Departments
- Clinics
- About
- Contact Information
-
-
-
- Environmental and Consumer Health Protection
- Epidemiology and Surveillance
- Health Facility Compliance Division
- HIV-STD Program
- Immunization Division
- Public Health Nursing Program
- Social Work Services
- Tuberculosis Elimination Program
- Zoonosis Control
- Community Health Services
- Oral Health Services
- Tobacco Prevention and Control
- Local Health Departments
- Publications
- Office Locations
-
-
-
-
- Binational Esperanza y Amistad Tuberculosis Program
- Office of Border Public Health
- Community Health Improvement
- HIV/STD Prevention
- Immunization
- Oral Health Services
- Preparedness and Response
- Public Health Sanitation
- Retail Food Safety
- Specialized Health and Social Services
- Texas Health Steps
- Tobacco Prevention and Control
- Tuberculosis Elimination
- Zoonosis Control
- Office Locations
- Local Health Departments
- Local Health Authorities
- Annual Reports
- Public Health Organizations Offering Monkeypox Vaccinations
-
-
-
- Birth Defects Monitoring Division
- Office of Border Public Health
- Specialized Health and Social Services
- Epidemiological Response Team
- Community Health Services
- General Sanitation Program
- Immunization Program
- Manufactured Foods Program
- Meat Safety Assurance Program
- Preparedness and Response Program
- Radiation Control Program
- TB Bi-National Project
- Texas Health Steps Program
- Tobacco Prevention and Control
- Toxic Substance Control Division
- Vision, Hearing and Speech Services
- Zoonosis Control
- Retail Food Safety
- Tuberculosis Elimination Program
- Local Health Departments
- Operation Border Health (OBH) 2025
-
- Center for Health Emergency Preparedness and Response (CHEPR)
-
-
- Texas Local Public Health Organizations
-
Regional and Local Health Operations (RLHO) Community Health Worker (CHW) Coordination Open submenu links Close submenu links
- About Regional and Local Health Operations (RLHO) Community Health Worker (CHW) Coordination
- Community Health Worker (CHW) or Promotor(a) Training and Certification Program Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- Regional and Local Health Operations (RLHO) Community Health Worker Training Center FAQs
- Training and Resources
-
Public Health Improvement - Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant (PHHSBG) Open submenu links Close submenu links
- Contact Regional and Local Health Operations
Get in Touch
Get in Touch
Office of Border Public Health
1100 W. 49th Street
Austin, TX 78756-1962
United States
Office of Border Public Health
Our mission is to improve the health and well-being of the people living within the U.S.-Mexico border region by collaborating with partners and leveraging resources within and outside of Texas. The Office of Border Public Health (OBPH) builds community relationships to encourage a safe and healthy environment and lifestyle.
The OBPH:
- Tracks and shares data on public health issues and their impact
- Supports binational public health coalitions
- Conducts community-based initiatives
- Supports Community Health Workers (CHWs)
We believe that public health issues cross international borders and that the area along the U.S.-Mexico border is one epidemiological zone with shared health risk factors. We work together to keep Texas healthy by keeping our border healthy.
About the Mandate
In 1991, the 72nd Texas Legislature enacted the Health and Safety Code, Chapter 12,§12.071. The mandate stipulates, "The department shall establish and maintain an office in the department to coordinate and promote health and environmental issues between this state and Mexico.”
All four U.S. border states —Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California— have border health offices.
Vision
A healthy Texas-Mexico border
Mission
To improve health and well-being along the Texas-Mexico border.
Focus Areas
- Actionable border data
- Cross-border communication and coordination
- Border-appropriate public health initiatives, promotion, and education
- Strategic local, state, and federal partnerships
OBPH Principles

DSHS Border Area
The Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) border area is the area within 100 kilometers (or 62 miles) of the Rio Grande. This definition comes from the La Paz Agreement of 1983. It includes the 32 Texas Border Counties listed below.
The Texas DSHS Border Area

32 Texas Border Counties by DSHS Public Health Region
| West Texas (PHR 9/10) | South Central Texas (PHR 8) | South Texas (PHR 11) |
|---|---|---|
| Brewster | Dimmit | Brooks |
| Crockett | Edwards | Cameron |
| Culberson | Frio | Duval |
| El Paso | Kinney | Hidalgo |
| Hudspeth | La Salle | Jim Hogg |
| Jeff Davis | Maverick | Kenedy |
| Pecos | Real | McMullen |
| Presidio | Uvalde | Starr |
| Reeves | Val Verde | Webb |
| Sutton | Zavala | Willacy |
| Terrell | Zapata |
Physical Address
Texas Department of State Health Services Office of Border Public Health
1100 W. 49th Street
Austin, TX 78756-1962
United States