Nevada contains six schools that offer care management programs. University of Nevada-Las Vegas, the highest-ranking care management school in NV, has a total student population of 29,080 and is the 1903rd highest ranked school in America.
Of the 6 care management schools in Nevada, only 2 have a student population over 10k. After taking into account tuition, living expenses, and financial aid, University of Phoenix-Northern Nevada Campus comes out as the most expensive ($24,762/yr), with Great Basin College as the lowest recorded at only $6,844/yr.
Care Management students from Nevada schools who go on to become care managers, physicians, doctors, nurses, etc. have a good chance at finding employment. For example, there are 3,886,690 people working as healthcare support employees alone in the US, and their average annual salary is $26,710. Also, Healthcare practitioner and technical employees make on average $69,690 per year and there are about 7,200,950 of them employed in the US today. In fact, in the Nevada alone, there are 43,770 employed healthcare practitioner and technical employees earning an average yearly salary of $79,510. Healthcare support employees in this state earn $29,490/yr and there are 23,840 employed.
Also, within the care management schools in Nevada, the average student population is 3,396 and average student-to-faculty ratio is 18 to 1. Aside from care management, there are 786 total degree (or certificate) programs in the state, with 1,014 people on average applying for a school. Undergraduate tuition costs are normally around $2,730, but can vary widely depending on the type of school.
Nevada Interesting Facts