Health Administration, D.H.A.
Minimum Totals for Graduation: 63 hours
Applications are accepted for admission to the Doctor of Health Administration (DHA) program for the fall cohort start. Applications must be received for the fall start by April 15. Inquire with the DHA secretary at 989-774-1351 or the DHA program director at 989-774-1640.
The program leading to the Doctor of Health Administration degree is designed to provide advanced academic, relevant, and professionally-oriented education. The DHA degree is not for individuals wishing to gain a degree to enter a field; rather, it is designed for professionals already in the field. The curricular and learning outcome objectives of this applied doctorate program are directed toward preparing individuals with the theoretical foundations, applied skills and practical expertise required for leadership positions within the healthcare industry. Emphasis will be given to imparting and advancing skills that foster life-long learning, systematic investigation and testing of practices and operational models via data/evidence-based strategies, and the public dissemination, and reporting of new findings within the field. The intent of the program is to provide advanced knowledge, skills, and abilities to practicing health professionals in a convenient, yet rigorous academic environment.
The program course of study is delivered in a sequenced manner of fifteen internet-based courses, six intensive face-to-face two and a half-day seminars, a general comprehensive examination, and an applied research dissertation. Students matriculating into this program cannot be granted prior experience credit toward semester credit hour degree requirements. Students matriculating into the DHA program may, with the approval of the program, transfer up to twelve (12) credits of course work taken in another regionally accredited doctoral program. The applicant must request the transfer and identify which courses he/she wishes to transfer. The DHA Program will review the request and make a determination as to the relevancy of the courses to the program, whether the courses are equivalent to any of the DHA courses, and whether the request will be granted. No transfer credits will be accepted to meet the dissertation requirement nor DHA 714 or DHA 726. The applicant must have earned at least a B grade on any course being requested to transfer. The applicant needs to submit a transcript showing the courses, a course description and the syllabus for the course. Transfer credits are subject to the eight-year expiration rule for completion of course work in the degree. A new group of students will begin studies each year. Each student will be assigned an advisor for the didactic portion of the program. Using a modular format, fifteen courses and six intensive seminars during the first two years of the program comprise the didactic portion of the program. The successful completion of a comprehensive examination at the end of the didactic portion of the program will transition the student to doctoral candidate status where the doctoral candidate will begin their dissertation preparation, prospectus/proposal, implementation, and defense before their doctoral committee, and reporting. During the dissertation phase, each student will work closely with a dissertation advisor/major professor. The didactic portion of the program carries fifty-one (51) semester credit hours and the dissertation portion carries twelve (12) semester credit hours for a total of sixty-three (63) semester credit hours for the entire program. Students will choose between a three (3) year or a five (5) year degree plan. Students choosing the three-year option will enroll in two (2) courses per term and generally begin on the dissertation in the third year after passing the comprehensive examination. Those choosing the five-year option will normally enroll in one (1) course per term and generally begin the dissertation in the fourth year after passing the comprehensive examination.
Admission Requirements, Retention & Termination Standards
Admission Requirement Snapshot
Application Deadline: April 15 (Fall)
TOEFL or ECFMG accepted for English Proficiency
See Admission Requirement Details Below
The minimum requirements and standards for applicant admission to the program include the following criteria:
- An earned regionally accredited master’s degree in an appropriate area of study (e.g., health administration, business administration, nursing management, public health, public administration) or a professional degree (e.g., M.D., D.O ., D.D.S.). Other areas of graduate study at the master’s degree level will be considered by petition to the faculty. GPA will be considered in the admissions process.
- Satisfactory completion of graduate coursework or equivalent must be provided as evidence by student applicants in the areas of health economics or economics, finance, statistics, administration/management, and organizational development/behavior.
- Demonstration of at least three (3) years of responsible experience at the mid to senior level in health administration, management, clinical leadership, and/or health or public health policy. While it is not necessary to be a manager, the applicant must demonstrate that he/she has significant influence in decision making, planning, clinical programming, policy or other aspects of health beyond being in a staff role or supervisory role. The determination of what is considered significant, mid to senior level experience is made by the Program director.
- Oral and written English language proficiency. Applicants whose native language is not English will be required to submit the results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores or another test of English equivalency (such as the ECFMG for physicians who were foreign medical students). This requirement may be waived if prior academic experience and success in other United States colleges/universities or employment settings can be satisfactorily demonstrated;
- Submission of a career goal statement and a current curriculum vitae or resume. The personal statement must include the following information: the applicant’s reason for seeking a doctoral degree, including how the applicant believes he/she will be able to use the degree as a leader in the field; personal background professionally that adds to the desire in seeking a doctoral degree; a brief description of the applicant’s background in quantitative reasoning, especially preparation to do statistics and research for the applied doctoral dissertation; what areas of interest he/she might have a doctoral research dissertation (what is the applicant passionate about in the field?); and anything else that the applicant wants to committee to know.
- Submission of at least three (3) names and contact information for references of professional colleagues that can speak to the applicant’s potential to do doctoral work, transcripts and other documentation customarily required for admission to the Graduate Studies will be required.
- Successful completion of an admission interview with the program faculty.
- Students admitted to the Program must attend the on-campus new DHA student orientation. If an admitted applicant cannot attend the orientation, he/she will need to defer to the next year.
Retention and Graduation Requirements:
Students must maintain a 3.00 GPA for graduation with no more than two (2) grades of C or C+ in the required courses for the degree. Students are only allowed to repeat a course twice to earn a higher grade. Students must pass the comprehensive examination in order to declare candidacy for the degree. A student may not register for dissertation credits until they have declared candidacy. Students may only repeat the comprehensive examination twice.
Program Requirements
Required Courses I (24 hours)
DHA 700 | Leadership Strategies for Healthcare Policy and Organizations | 3(3-0) |
DHA 702 | Probability and Statistics for the Health Professions | 3(3-0) |
DHA 704 | Population Health | 3(3-0) |
DHA 705 | Seminar in Public Health | 1(1-0) |
DHA 706 | Quantitative Analysis in Health Organization | 3(3-0) |
DHA 708 | Organizational Theory and Behavior for the Health Professions | 3(3-0) |
DHA 709 | Seminar in Health Dynamics: Current Issues, Trends and Change | 1(1-0) |
DHA 710 | Qualitative Analysis in Health Care | 3(3-0) |
DHA 712 | Research Methods and Practice for the Health Professions | 3(3-0) |
DHA 713 | Seminar in Health Services Research | 1(1-0) |
Required Courses II (27 hours)
DHA 714 | Health Systems Thinking and Practice | 3(3-0) |
DHA 716 | Communication in Health Organizations | 3(3-0) |
DHA 717 | Seminar in Healthcare Dynamics: Stakeholder Relations | 1(1-0) |
DHA 718 | Healthcare Law, Regulations and Ethics | 3(3-0) |
DHA 720 | Health Economics | 3(3-0) |
DHA 721 | Seminar in Healthcare Policy and Politics | 1(1-0) |
DHA 722 | Health Informatics | 3(3-0) |
DHA 724 | Fiscal Responsibility and Accountability in Healthcare | 3(3-0) |
DHA 725 | Seminar in Strategic Planning for Health Organizations | 1(1-0) |
DHA 726 | Applied Leadership | 3(3-0) |
DHA 728 | Comparative Health Systems | 3(3-0) |
Required Courses III (12 hours)
Total: 63 semester hours