Our department mission is to deliver exceptional and accessible education that prepares individuals to define, strengthen, and reimagine systems of health.  

We prepare both current and aspiring healthcare professionals to thrive at the intersection of patient care, administration, data, and leadership. Within our broad suite of programs, our students become skilled, equity-minded professionals equipped to lead in diverse employment settings. In our flexible portfolio of interconnected programs, learners can enter through a certificate, bachelor’s, or master’s degree and seamlessly advance toward graduate study or career specialization. 

Through interprofessional learning, applied research, and real-world experiences, our graduates are empowered to improve health systems, optimize data-driven decision-making, and promote population health and well-being.

Health Sciences

We prepare students from varied backgrounds for career advancement in a wide range of healthcare settings; offering flexible, online learning that supports both immediate skill development and long-term professional growth.

Health Administration

Immersion in an interprofessional learning community alongside clinicians, physicians and individuals with administrative and managerial backgrounds prepares you for leading in real-life healthcare settings and helps build your professional network. Learn within a diverse range of areas including design thinking and action research, healthcare finance, data analytics and organizational theory.

Data Analytics

Our programs are at the cutting edge of Data Science and Analytics, applied to the healthcare sector. A fundamental understanding of how metrics are created, improved, and maintained is a vital function for any healthcare professional working today.

Cardiac Technician

This program trains individuals with backgrounds in exercise science, engineering, and health sciences to become skilled technicians in cardiac implantable electronic device technologies that help support optimal heart function such as pacemakers and defibrillators. Across the nation, there is a critical shortage of professionals trained to manage these life-sustaining technologies.