We’ve pulled together some essential information you should know about the program, including how many students graduate each year, the diversity of these students, average starting salaries, and more. Also, learn how Valley College-Cleveland stacks up against peers offering allied health services.
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Valley College-Cleveland offers the allied health services program; degree-level completion data is not currently broken out.
Valley College-Cleveland reports the allied health services program; completion counts are not currently reported.
Allied Health Services graduates with a bachelor’s degree from Valley College-Cleveland earn a median of $24,468 a year. This is higher than $24,468, the median for all majors at Valley College-Cleveland.
Earning a bachelor’s degree at Valley College-Cleveland, allied health services graduates take on a median debt of $9,500 in student loans. This is higher than $9,500, the typical median for all majors at Valley College-Cleveland.
Review the following statistics on the composition of the allied health services majors at Valley College-Cleveland.
This allied health services program at Valley College-Cleveland offers the following related majors:
| Concentration | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Medical/Clinical Assistant | 49 |
Valley College-Cleveland awarded 49 degrees in medical/clinical assistant in the latest year of data — 94% to women and 6% to men. Most of these graduates identified as Black or African American (39%).
More about our data sources and methodologies.