Healthcare Administration

Your Healthcare Administrator Career Plan: From Degrees Required to Paychecks Earned

Your Healthcare Administrator Career Plan: From Degrees Required to Paychecks Earned
Healthcare administrators earn a healthy annual income of $99,730 per year. Average pay is highest in government ($110,460) and hospitals ($108,730) and lowest in nursing and residential care facilities ($84,260). Image from Death to Stock Photos
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Melissa Kaye November 8, 2019

Behind-the-scenes of a hospital doesn't have to be like a TV drama—especially if there's a take-charge, organized healthcare administrator to keep things running smoothly. To become a healthcare administrator, you'll need strong leadership skills, organizational skills, and people skills.

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Healthcare administrators work behind the scenes at hospitals and other healthcare facilities to ensure that everything runs as safely, smoothly, and efficiently as possible. It’s not a glamour job, but no medical facility could operate without them.

Most employers expect healthcare administrators to hold a master’s degree, either in healthcare administration (MHA) or in business (MBA). Many MBA programs now offer a concentration in healthcare administration to cater to this fast-growing sector of the US economy.

With America’s population aging and, inevitably, growing more infirm, now is a good time to consider a career in healthcare. You don’t have to be a doctor or nurse to contribute to the nation’s well-being. America needs healthcare administrators too. This article explains how to become one. It covers:

  • What does a healthcare administrator do?
  • Education and training to become a healthcare administrator
  • Salary and career outlook for healthcare administrators

What does a healthcare administrator do?

Healthcare administrators manage the delivery of healthcare in various facilities, focusing on improving both efficiency and quality of services. The job requires a delicate balance of healthcare and financial priorities: both are essential to the continuing success of any healthcare operation.

Healthcare administrators oversee large enterprises, which requires them to delegate responsibilities to appropriate staff members. They need to be excellent people managers to select the right employees for each job and to motivate team members to provide optimal medical and health services.

As a healthcare administrator, you could work in a variety of venues, including:

  • Hospitals
  • Emergency services
  • Small or large doctor’s offices and outpatient clinics
  • Long-term nursing homes
  • Home healthcare agencies
  • Health insurance companies

Depending on the size of the organization, healthcare administrators may manage the entire facility or a specific department. They must work closely with doctors, nurses, and labs to coordinate care and eliminate redundancy. Their many responsibilities include:

  • Determining a facility’s short- and long-term goals
  • Monitoring department budgets
  • Tracking the use of facilities and services to minimize waste
  • Ensuring that equipment is up-to-date and in compliance with regulations
  • Recruiting and training new staff
  • Creating staff work schedules
  • Attending investor meetings and governing boards to represent the facility’s interests
  • Communicating facility objectives to staff

Skills required to succeed in this role include:

  • Organizational skills
  • Communication skills
  • Supervisory skills
  • Ethical judgment
  • High emotional intelligence (EQ) to deal with sensitive health issues to relate to patients

Regarding this last item: researchers at St. Joseph’s College in Maine recommend that graduate schools for healthcare administration implement more programing on emotional intelligence. They found that including curriculum on emotional intelligence had a positive impact on leadership effectiveness in graduates.

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Health administration undergraduates sometimes start out in admissions, marketing, risk management, managed-care analysis, or other non-clinical staff positions and work their way into higher-level administrative roles. While it’s possible to work in healthcare administration without an MHA, it can take a lot longer to climb the managerial ladder without a master’s degree. (source)

According to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of May 2018, the median wage for health service managers was $99,730 per year, with the highest 10 percent in the field earning over $182,600 in base pay. Employment opportunities for health services managers is expected to grow by 20 percent by 2026. This growth is much faster than growth for other occupations. (source)

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Education and training to become a healthcare administrator

A bachelor’s degree is the bare minimum academic requirement to start a medical and health services career that leads to healthcare administration. For most employers, though, it won’t be enough. Leadership-oriented positions in larger facilities typically call for an MBA or a Master of Healthcare Administration (MHA). An MHA typically takes about two years to complete on a full-time basis.

What are some of the best healthcare administration degree programs?

According to US News and World Report, some top schools for healthcare administration and management for bachelor’s degree and master’s degree programs include:

All of these universities include traditional bachelor’s and master’s degree programs. Some also offer what’s called competency-based curriculum models versus a traditional curriculum. UNC describes its competency model this way: “Rather than simply imparting knowledge and skills to students and assessing what students know, a competency-based curriculum focuses on assessing what students can accomplish with the knowledge, skills, and behaviors they acquire during the program.” The competencies align with the skills necessary for the job, with courses focusing on such skills as analysis, law and ethics, and communication.

Regardless of the approach you pursue, be sure to choose a program that’s accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Management Education (CAHME), which hosts a database searchable by state of accredited programs. It’s the only organization that puts a stamp of approval on healthcare management academic programs.

The CAHME started accrediting online MHA programs in 2015.

Accredited online MHA programs include:

Those who choose the MBA route—a sensible choice, since healthcare administration is as much about business as it is about healthcare— should pursue a concentration in healthcare management. As an added bonus, you can transfer your skills with this specialization: should you decide healthcare management is not for you, your general business education will provide a smart fallback.

Or you could get two degrees. The University of California – Berkeley offers a program that allows students to earn an MBA and a Master’s in Public Health (MPH) concurrently, with an eye towards “preparing leaders who are innovating and reinventing the healthcare sector.” That program is highly selective, admitting only 20 students in each cohort. Other schools offer concurrent programs that aren’t as exclusive. A dual program can take about three years to complete, while an MBA with a concentration typically takes two years.

A final option is to pursue a healthcare administration certificate from a CAHME-accredited university. Certificate programs are not as thorough as master’s programs, and they don’t carry as much weight with employers, but they definitely represent a step up from a bachelor’s degree. They also signal your commitment to improving your skills in healthcare administration, which always helps.

Further certifications or education to become a healthcare administrator

There are no licensing requirements for healthcare administrators, meaning that there are no mandatory degrees or certifications to hold the position. That said, most employers prefer candidates who hold at least a master’s-level degree, and many will not consider applicants who lack one. Some schools offer a Ph.D. in healthcare administration or a Doctorate in Healthcare Administration (DHA), but these degrees are rarely necessary for any but the highest-level positions, or to teach healthcare administration at the university level.

Healthcare administrators are represented by several professional organizations, some of which offer certifications in the field. They include:

Salary and career outlook for healthcare administrators

Healthcare administration is one of the great invisible line items in the United States. One study estimates that 30 percent of US healthcare costs go to healthcare administration. For better or worse, healthcare administration is a robust professional field.

The job outlook for healthcare administrative positions is strong; jobs are expected to grow by 18 percent through 2028, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Better still, healthcare administrators earn a healthy annual income of $99,730 per year. Average pay is highest in government ($110,460) and hospitals ($108,730) and lowest in nursing and residential care facilities ($84,260).

Healthcare administrators who maintain patient records and data are known as health information managers. In this role, you’ll work closely with technology and databases and keep up with systems trends to keep patient information secure. Indeed reports that healthcare information managers earn, on average, $74,172.

From structural and finance issues to biotech and pharmaceutical companies, there are lots to explore and tackle in the healthcare administration field. Think beyond the doctors and nurses that you see for your office visit: there are others behind the scenes, working to do good for the sake of public health. If you want to help patients, focus on today’s critical health issues, and improve the delivery of public health, a healthcare administrator career may be the best option for you.

(Last Updated on February 26, 2024)

Questions or feedback? Email editor@noodle.com

About the Editor

Tom Meltzer spent over 20 years writing and teaching for The Princeton Review, where he was lead author of the company's popular guide to colleges, before joining Noodle.

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