Below are the key facts about the program, including its ranking, popularity, student demographics, and graduate outcomes. Find out how Midwestern Career College compares to other colleges that offer allied health services.
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Midwestern Career College offers the allied health services program; degree-level completion data is not currently broken out.
Midwestern Career College reports the allied health services program; completion counts are not currently reported.
Allied Health Services majors who earn their bachelor’s degree from Midwestern Career College go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $30,344 a year. This is lower than $35,466, the median for all majors at Midwestern Career College.
To complete a bachelor’s at Midwestern Career College, allied health services students borrow a median amount of $7,521 in student loans. This is lower than $12,452, the typical median for all majors at Midwestern Career College.
Review the following statistics on the composition of the allied health services majors at Midwestern Career College.
The allied health services program at Midwestern Career College breaks down into the following more specific areas of study:
| Concentration | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Medical/Clinical Assistant | 75 |
Midwestern Career College awarded 75 degrees in medical/clinical assistant recently — 99% to women and 1% to men. The largest share of these graduates were Black or African American (61%).
More about our data sources and methodologies.