Houstonian Chris Hunt and his wife, Ashton, created MedVendor to be a search platform that features up-to-date information for case workers for patients seeking at-home care. Photo via Getty Images

Anyone who has had to Google their way to home health care knows that it’s not the best way to get effective help. That’s where MedVendor comes in.

Houstonian Chris Hunt and his wife, Ashton, created MedVendor to be a search platform that features up-to-date information for caseworkers for case workers for patients seeking at-home care.

At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Chris Hunt was at a loss for how to help patients. He had recently taken on a new role in wound care sales. His company would send dressings directly to patients, but finding someone who could apply and change them was a different matter.

“It was an absolute nightmare using [Google] as a resource because you had all of these out-of-date listings. So it was a 50-50 shot whether that company would even be in business… And so it would be one in every seven, one in every eight calls that I would make that I could actually get ahold of somebody that I could talk to about wound care services,” Chris Hunt recalls.

In 2020, the couple began interviewing developers to take their idea to reality. They incorporated as an LLC in 2021.

Chris Hunt calls the platform a home-care equivalent to Angie’s List or Yelp. Though it’s currently designed for users in the medical field, he says that they are working on crafting MedVendor to be used by the general public as well.

Users input the type of service they’re looking for, then can select multiple individual patient needs to further tailor the search. “It'll give you a short list from that of companies that can service those criteria. And once you've been given that list, then you can filter patient zip code as well as patient insurance plan to then whittle that search further and really get to a granular level in terms of what resources that you want to find,” Chris Hunt explains.

The couple says that their Houston location has been both a blessing and a curse for their burgeoning business, which released the MedVendor platform on October 1. Though Chris Hunt says that cutting his business’ teeth in Southeast Texas, with its expansive medical community “proves your worth and holds a ton of weight. There you can go to other markets and really capitalize.”

However, MedVendor doesn’t want to be known just as a Texas company — the Hunts hope to expand far beyond the Houston area to eventually become a household name.

Ashton Hunt, who was also in medical sales before the couple took the leap to pursue MedVendor full-time, is marketing director for the company. She adds that in Q4 of this year, they plan to release a phone app version of the platform, which will make using it even easier for medical teams.

“Ideally, a case manager or social worker, if they're working on a discharge plan for a patient, they can even be bedside with them with their phone to help find some resources to then pass along to the family or the caregiver,” Chris Hunt says.

Ultimately, the goal of the company, the couple says, is to open up possibilities for patients. By providing up-to-date, vetted information, the hope is that MedVendor will not only supply them with the care they need, but educate them in the process.

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Johnson Space Center and UT partner to expand research, workforce development

onward and upward

NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston has forged a partnership with the University of Texas System to expand collaboration on research, workforce development and education that supports space exploration and national security.

“It’s an exciting time for the UT System and NASA to come together in new ways because Texas is at the epicenter of America’s space future. It’s an area where America is dominant, and we are committed as a university system to maintaining and growing that dominance,” Dr. John Zerwas, chancellor of the UT System, said in a news release.

Vanessa Wyche, director of Johnson Space Center, added that the partnership with the UT System “will enable us to meet our nation’s exploration goals and advance the future of space exploration.”

The news release noted that UT Health Houston and the UT Medical Branch in Galveston already collaborate with NASA. The UT Medical Branch’s aerospace medicine residency program and UT Health Houston’s space medicine program train NASA astronauts.

“We’re living through a unique moment where aerospace innovation, national security, economic transformation, and scientific discovery are converging like never before in Texas," Zerwas said. “UT institutions are uniquely positioned to partner with NASA in building a stronger and safer Texas.”

Zerwas became chancellor of the UT System in 2025. He joined the system in 2019 as executive vice chancellor for health affairs. Zerwas represented northwestern Ford Bend County in the Texas House from 2007 to 2019.

In 1996, he co-founded a Houston-area medical practice that became part of US Anesthesia Partners in 2012. He remained active in the practice until joining the UT System. Zerwas was chief medical officer of the Memorial Hermann Hospital System from 2003 to 2008 and was its chief physician integration officer until 2009.

Zerwas, a 1973 graduate of the Houston area’s Bellaire High School, is an alumnus of the University of Houston and Baylor College of Medicine.

Texas booms as No. 3 best state to start a business right now

Innovation Starts Here

High employment growth and advantageous entrepreneurship rates have led Texas into a triumphant No. 3 spot in WalletHub's ranking of "Best and Worst States to Start a Business" for 2026.

Texas bounced back into the No. 3 spot nationally for the first time since 2023. After dropping into 8th place in 2024, the state hustled into No. 4 last year.

Ever year, WalletHub compares all 50 states based on their business environment, costs, and access to financial resources to determine the best places for starting a business. The study analyzes 25 relevant metrics to determine the rankings, such as labor costs, office space affordability, financial accessibility, the number of startups per capita, and more.

When about half of all new businesses don't last more than five years, finding the right environment for a startup is vital for long-term success, the report says.

Here's how Texas ranked across the three main categories in the study:

  • No. 1 – Business environment
  • No. 11 – Access to resources
  • No. 34 – Business costs

The state boasts the 10th highest entrepreneurship rates nationwide, and it has the 11th-highest share of fast-growing firms. WalletHub also noted that more than half (53 percent) of all Texas businesses are located in "strong clusters," which suggests they are more likely to be successful long-term.

"Clusters are interconnected businesses that specialize in the same field, and 'strong clusters' are ones that are in the top 25 percent of all regions for their particular specialization," the report said. "If businesses fit into one of these clusters, they will have an easier time getting the materials they need, and can tap into an existing customer base. To some degree, it might mean more competition, though."

Texas business owners should also keep their eye on Houston, which was recently ranked the 7th best U.S. city for starting a new business, and it was dubbed one of the top-10 tech hubs in North America. Workers in Texas are the "third-most engaged" in the country, the study added, a promising attribute for employers searching for the right place to begin their next business venture.

"Business owners in Texas benefit from favorable conditions, as the state has the third-highest growth in working-age population and the third-highest employment growth in the country, too," the report said.

The top 10 best states for starting a business in 2026 are:

  • No. 1 – Florida
  • No. 2 – Utah
  • No. 3 – Texas
  • No. 4 – Oklahoma
  • No. 5 – Idaho
  • No. 6 – Mississippi
  • No. 7 – Georgia
  • No. 8 – Indiana
  • No. 9 – Nevada
  • No. 10 – California
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This article originally appeared on CultureMap.com.