Below are the key facts about the program, including its ranking, popularity, student demographics, and graduate outcomes. Find out how Miller-Motte College compares to other colleges that offer allied health services.
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Miller-Motte College offers the allied health services program; degree-level completion data is not currently broken out.
Miller-Motte College offers the allied health services program; completion counts are not currently reported.
Allied Health Services students who finish a bachelor’s at Miller-Motte College go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $22,935 a year. This is lower than $27,928, the median for all majors at Miller-Motte College.
While getting their bachelor’s degree at Miller-Motte College, allied health services graduates take on a median debt of $16,500 in student loans. This is lower than $28,329, the typical median for all majors at Miller-Motte College.
Take a look at the following statistics related to the make-up of the allied health services majors at Miller-Motte College-Wilmington.
The allied health services program at Miller-Motte College breaks down into the following more specific areas of study:
| Concentration | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Medical/Clinical Assistant | 28 |
Miller-Motte College granted 28 completions in medical/clinical assistant recently — 96% to women and 4% to men. Most of these graduates identified as Black or African American (46%).
More about our data sources and methodologies.