My husband is applying for the Medical Services Corps (MSC) and intends to do so with constructive credit (think: advanced standing). There are a couple of very specific requirements to do this. First, it must be a US RA degree (either master's or doctorate, if the only realistic options were doctorate level he plans to do the UMPI MAOL quickly to gain access).
Second, the degree must be in one of the following:
"Health Administration, Healthcare Administration, Healthcare Management, Health Management and Policy, Health Services Administration, Hospital Administration, Accounting, Business Administration, Business Management, Economics, Finance, Marketing, Statistics, Information Systems Management, Health Information Management, Health Information Technology, Emergency Management, Architecture, Architectural Engineering, Civil Engineering, Construction Management"
Third, it must have secondary accreditation from a professional body:
"[N]ewly accessed MSC officers will be awarded constructive service credit only for qualifying graduate degrees accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Management Education (CAHME), Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), National Architectural Accreditation Board (NAAB), Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET), or Advanced College of Clinical Engineering (ACCE)."
That third requirement rules out VUL, South College, WGU, HAU, UAGC, Rasmussen etc. (basically all the usual contenders we see here), and the first takes out places like Aston and MBS which have AACSB but aren't American. The third is the real kicker though.
Has anyone come across any remaining contenders that aren't insanely expensive? At the masters level, the only ones I have found so far are UMass Lowell, UTPB, and Georgia Southwestern State. The time investment isn't an issue, he has two and a half years or so, but we are paying out of pocket so we hope to keep it to 15K or thereabouts which is made more difficult by the fact we are overseas - so he is a US resident out-of-state in every state.
Side notes: He has a decent chance of getting into a program in most of the above areas (BS Economics w/ 3.9 GPA, about to finish BSBA Health Management and Finance, BA Mathematics). His preference is for a regular master's, not a terminal MBA, but obviously he has to sort of take what he can get.
Second, the degree must be in one of the following:
"Health Administration, Healthcare Administration, Healthcare Management, Health Management and Policy, Health Services Administration, Hospital Administration, Accounting, Business Administration, Business Management, Economics, Finance, Marketing, Statistics, Information Systems Management, Health Information Management, Health Information Technology, Emergency Management, Architecture, Architectural Engineering, Civil Engineering, Construction Management"
Third, it must have secondary accreditation from a professional body:
"[N]ewly accessed MSC officers will be awarded constructive service credit only for qualifying graduate degrees accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Management Education (CAHME), Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), National Architectural Accreditation Board (NAAB), Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET), or Advanced College of Clinical Engineering (ACCE)."
That third requirement rules out VUL, South College, WGU, HAU, UAGC, Rasmussen etc. (basically all the usual contenders we see here), and the first takes out places like Aston and MBS which have AACSB but aren't American. The third is the real kicker though.
Has anyone come across any remaining contenders that aren't insanely expensive? At the masters level, the only ones I have found so far are UMass Lowell, UTPB, and Georgia Southwestern State. The time investment isn't an issue, he has two and a half years or so, but we are paying out of pocket so we hope to keep it to 15K or thereabouts which is made more difficult by the fact we are overseas - so he is a US resident out-of-state in every state.
Side notes: He has a decent chance of getting into a program in most of the above areas (BS Economics w/ 3.9 GPA, about to finish BSBA Health Management and Finance, BA Mathematics). His preference is for a regular master's, not a terminal MBA, but obviously he has to sort of take what he can get.