The MHA program is delivered in convenient 5-week terms offering flexibility. All courses include a weekly forum discussion relevant to the week’s learning topic. This allows you to communicate and collaborate with other students and learn from your peers and faculty’s personal and professional experiences.
Build leadership and administration competency as you learn to:
Many MHA professionals work in hospitals, integrated health systems, academic medical centers, pharmaceutical and medical equipment manufacturing companies, medical insurance payers, long-term facilities, public health departments, and consulting companies. Job responsibilities and titles include:
The MHA is an innovative and cutting-edge program with a total of 30 credits. The MHA program is designed to meet the curriculum standards set by the National Center on Healthcare Leadership (NCHL) Competency Model 3.0, the American College Healthcare Executives (ACHE) Competency Assessment Tool, and the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) Body of Knowledge Competency Model. The MHA courses offer the required critical learning and professional preparation to sit for certification and fellowship credentials such as:
William Woods online graduate programs are available to students across the country. In Missouri, our students come from Fulton, Columbia, Jefferson City, St. Louis, Kansas City, Moberly, Springfield, Ozark, Cape Girardeau, Rolla, and many more locations. Beyond Missouri, our online graduates hail from California, Illinois, Kansas, Washington, Arkansas, and other states.
30 Credits
Delivered online to fit your schedule, location and convenience, the William Woods University Master of Health Administration program will prepare you for this growing need with the leadership and administration skills needed to manage in the health administration field. In this program, you will learn to: Plan, direct, and coordinate medical and health services, manage a facility, clinical area, or department. Analyze ethical and legal issues in health administration policies and develop recommendations for improvement. Evaluate health facilities’ culture and underlying structure to develop effective management and leadership strategies. Analyze the effects of decisions on the financial position of the facility.
| This course is designed to provide a comprehensive survey of the current status of the United States health services system. Course studies encompass a macroscopic analysis of the healthcare industry and the major factors influencing the United States healthcare system. Specific topics include an overview of organization, management, and economic support structures, the development and deployment of organization recourses and the delivery component of the United States health system as well as recent developments regarding the Affordable Care Act. credits: | Healthcare Administration | 3 |
| In this course, students learn about the population-wide health issues and develop evidence-based health programs enables healthcare professionals to promote population health programs to meet the health care needs of targeted community and population. In this course, students utilize clinical data sets and combine this knowledge with public health data sets concerning socioeconomic, global health, and behavioral influencers of health in local and global settings. Students analyze these influencers to determine effective, appropriate programs and solutions to benefit the population as a whole. Students assess health issues facing targeted populations and create programs or initiatives that engage the community to improve population health care outcomes. credits: | Population Health Management and Global Health | 3 |
| Policy, Legal, and Ethics Aspects of Healthcare Administration will provide an overview of the healthcare policy, ethics, laws, health law issues, and how healthcare is affected by the law. Through reading, writing, and relevant activities, students will learn about a variety of subjects, including history of healthcare policy, ethics, tort law, criminal aspects of healthcare, professional and institutional liability, legal reporting, and end of life issues. The course will require you to draw upon basic knowledge of health care management and systems obtained during your MHA studies. credits: | Policy, Legal, and Ethics Aspects of Healthcare | 3 |
| This course provides an overview of the role of human resources in health care organizations, including the recruitment, retention, management, and development of these resources. Students gain an understanding of key roles that human resource professionals play in planning for workforce needs and how human resource management should be directly aligned with the strategic goals of the organization. Also, in this course, students examine organizational behavior and dynamics, as well as the roles and responsibilities of management within health care organizations. Students focus on understanding management and leadership principles to help navigate change. Students consider the theory and practice of managing individuals and groups through motivation, communication, teamwork, collaboration, leadership, organizational change, negotiation, and conflict management and resolution. credits: | Human Resources in Healthcare and Organizational Development | 3 |
| The purpose of this course is to familiarize the student with commonly used financial terminology, obtain a better understanding of the preparation and interpretation of financial statement data and provide a foundation which will better enable the student to utilize quantitative methods for financial decision making within the healthcare industry. credits: | Healthcare Systems Financial Managment | 3 |
| Students in this course have the opportunity to learn about challenges and forces that affect organization business and operational performance and patient care outcomes. In this course, students examine the forces and trends that affect performance outcomes within health care organizations and analyze how high reliability health care organizations model and implement sustainable operations management practices. Students assess and apply how changes in health care organization structure, logistics, and supply chains can result in positive patient care outcomes and explore evidence-based management practice models to promote and implement performance excellence standards in various health care settings. credits: | Healthcare Operations Management | 3 |
| Students in this course have the opportunity to learn how health information systems, technologies and applications assist healthcare professionals and leaders in the execution of organizational strategies and the transformation of the healthcare environment. Students also learn how these complex systems help decision makers in the organization to improve patient care outcomes and performance. Topics include evolving technologies such as data analytics, eHealth, personalized medicine, and social media; using technology applications to manage population health; risk assessment, including legal and ethical issues in health information technology; and change management, Students are challenged by scenario-based discussions that analyze the best information technology practices across multiple industries credits: | Healthcare Information Management Systems | 3 |
| Students in this course are introduced to the principles and concepts of quality healthcare management and patient safety. Topics include a diverse overview of healthcare quality models that incorporate methods of assessing quality and patient safety and applying techniques for quality improvement on a patient and population level. Students will explore and discuss the roles of data collection and statistical tools in quality improvement as they relate to reporting and promoting healthcare quality information. They will evaluate government agencies, private sector organizations, and international healthcare quality initiatives, and the relationship between health care consumerism and the demand for quality healthcare. Prerequisite: HLT505, HLT519, HLT527, HLT555 & HLT583 credits: | Healthcare Quality Management | 3 |
| Throughout this course, students review and apply the phases of strategic planning, integrating the principles and practices presented throughout the Master of Healthcare Administration (MHA) program. They examine the role of strategic planning in achieving organizational performance excellence, as well as the notion of planning as a cyclical process within the healthcare organization. Students submit a comprehensive strategic plan and recommend courses of action that help healthcare organizations address their strategic and tactical needs and the needs of their communities. Prerequisite: All MHA courses except HLT 598 credits: | Healthcare Strategic Planning | 3 |
| This course represents the culmination of the MHA program. As such, students will be required to integrate the knowledge gained throughout their program of study. Students will prepare and present a critical paper based upon their analysis of a current health administration issue. Prerequisite: Completion of all core MHA courses. credits: | Integrated Studies in Health Administration | 3 |