Top Management Degrees Publishes Top 50 Online Master's in Healthcare Management 2018
HOUSTON, March 7, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Online business education and career guide Top Management Degrees (http://www.topmanagementdegrees.com/) has published a new ranking of the Top 50 Online Master's in Healthcare Management Programs 2018 (https://www.topmanagementdegrees.com/rankings/best-online-masters-in-healthcare-management/).
This ranking is designed to help prospective students find a program that will help them pursue a future career in the healthcare industry. A list of over 260 schools was obtained and evaluated on accreditation, affordability, and prestige. The data for this ranking was derived from the most recent and publicly available sources, including the Princeton Review, US News and World Report, and the National Center for Education Statistics. Data was gathered for each program, weighted equally, and then averaged to find the top online master's in healthcare management programs.
Placing first in this online ranking is the University of Texas at Dallas Naveen Jindal School of Management in Richardson, Texas. Tied at second place is the University of Alabama at Birmingham Collat School of Business in Birmingham, Alabama, and the University of South Dakota Beacom School of Business in Vermillion, South Dakota.
Other schools making the list include (alphabetically ordered):
Abilene Christian University -- Abilene, Texas
Arizona State University -- Phoenix, Arizona
Ashland University -- Ashland, Ohio
Baker University -- Baldwin City, Kansas
Ball State University -- Muncie, Indiana
Brenau University -- Gainesville, Georgia
California State University, East Bay -- Hayward, California
California University of Pennsylvania -- California, Pennsylvania
Cedarville University -- Cedarville, Ohio
Champlain College -- Burlington, Vermont
Chatham University -- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Clarkson University -- Potsdam, New York
College of St. Scholastica -- Duluth, Minnesota
Creighton University -- Omaha, Nebraska
Doane University -- Lincoln, Nebraska
Drake University -- Des Moines, Iowa
East Carolina University -- Greenville, North Carolina
Florida Atlantic University -- Boca Raton, Florida
Florida Southern College -- Lakeland, Florida
George Washington University -- Washington, District of Columbia
Kettering University -- Flint, Michigan
King University -- Bristol, Tennessee
Marist College -- Poughkeepsie, New York
Mercer University -- Macon, Georgia
Misericordia University -- Dallas, Pennsylvania
Northeastern University -- Boston, Massachusetts
Ohio University -- Athens, Ohio
Oklahoma Christian University -- Edmond, Oklahoma
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences -- Tulsa, Oklahoma
Portland State University -- Portland, Oregon
Quinnipiac University -- Hamden, Connecticut
Salve Regina University -- Newport, Rhode Island
Southeast Missouri State University -- Cape Girardeau, Missouri
Southern Adventist University -- Collegedale, Tennessee
Southern Illinois University Carbondale -- Carbondale, Illinois
Stevenson University -- Stevenson, Maryland
University of Cincinnati -- Cincinnati, Ohio
University of Delaware -- Newark, Delaware
University of Massachusetts Amherst -- Amherst, Massachusetts
University of Michigan-Flint -- Flint, Michigan
University of North Texas -- Denton, Texas
University of Saint Mary -- Leavenworth, Kansas
University of Scranton -- Scranton, Pennsylvania
University of St. Francis -- Joliet, Illinois
Valparaiso University -- Valparaiso, Indiana
West Texas A&M University -- Canyon, Texas
Wright State University -- Dayton, Ohio
What started as lone doctors and healers in towns and villages has evolved over time to an organized industry full of small and large healthcare facilities with projections to grow more than any other industry in the next decade. The healthcare industry is no stranger to change-- professionals in this industry must continually evolve and adapt to new and complicated diseases. But change is also the mechanism that instigates the birth of new and exciting technologies, pathologies, and care. In the same way that this industry needs excellent doctors and medical researchers, it also needs highly trained administrative professionals who know business and management and are genuinely interested in healthcare.
Contact:
Tammie Cagle, editor
Top Management Degrees
(425) 440-0619
[email protected]
SOURCE Top Management Degrees
Related Links
http://www.topmanagementdegrees.com
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