February 2026 — DOGE Impact Assessment
What the first 90 days of DOGE activity actually did to federal health IT — and what the data says about FY2027 pipeline risk for DHA, VA, and HHS contractors.
Bottom line up front
DOGE's first 90 days inside federal health IT produced a smaller visible footprint than the headlines suggested and a larger invisible one than most contractors have priced in. Direct contract terminations are concentrated in consulting, communications, and DEI-adjacent task orders; the deeper impact is a soft freeze on new IDIQ task order releases at VA OIT and DHA J6 while policy reviews run. For the federal health IT prime and mid-tier ecosystem, the question isn't whether DOGE cancels your contract — it's whether your FY2026 task orders get exercised on the original cadence, and whether FY2027 new starts survive the OMB passback cycle.
By the numbers
The three signal groups
Portfolio risk reassessment
Any BPA or IDIQ task order whose primary deliverable is a report, roadmap, assessment, strategy deck, or playbook. Communications, public affairs, and DEI-adjacent scopes. Advisory SME labor categories ($250+/hr without concrete delivery tied to running systems). Small prime positions on advisory-heavy recompetes should assume ~30% probability of descope or non-exercise for at least one option year through FY2028.
MHS GENESIS deployment follow-ons, VA EHRM sustainment lines, DHA J6 cloud modernization work. These survive but face extended award cycles and tighter scope discipline. Expect heavier J&A scrutiny, reduced labor mix flexibility, and more frequent partial exercise of option years rather than full-year exercises. Carry 60-day AR runway above prior assumptions.
Direct clinical delivery (telehealth operations, My Military Health, TRICARE claims infrastructure), cybersecurity compliance work with active ATO dependencies, ONC interoperability enforcement support. These are running systems with beneficiary-facing impact — the political cost of interruption is high and the delivery teams know it.
What to do next
- Audit your backlog for advisory exposure. Pull every active task order. If the deliverable is a PDF without a running system behind it, flag it as Tier-1 DOGE risk and start the conversation with the CO now about repositioning scope toward measurable outcomes.
- Stress-test FY2026 revenue with a 60-day lag. Assume every new task order arrives 45–75 days later than the FY2025 cadence. Revisit covenants, hiring plans, and subcontractor ramp commitments against that shifted profile.
- Lean into the restoration signals. CDMRP and ARPA-H are the cleanest growth lanes for FY2026–FY2027. If your past performance supports a credible CDMRP proposal, the competitive field has thinned as advisory-heavy competitors retrench.
- Watch the FY2027 passback. OMB passback drops in late April. The true DOGE impact on federal health IT posts FY2027 will be visible there, not in DOGE press releases. Plan to update your pipeline probability assumptions the week after passback.
Sources and methodology
Task order cadence analysis: USASpending.gov award posting dates, Dec 2025–Feb 2026 vs Dec 2024–Feb 2025, filtered to T4NG2, ECMS, and DHITUC parent IDVs. SAM.gov posting counts: SAM.gov Contract Opportunities API, NAICS 541512/541511, monthly rollups. Direct cut announcements: DoD public affairs releases and Mission Meets Tech reporting on the April 10 $5.1B consulting action (see latest.html). Restoration figures: HAC-D markup documents via Congress.gov. This brief represents Mission Meets Tech analysis for MMT Premium subscribers; verify each claim against primary sources before operational use.