HealthCare@Anderson
Events and Programs
Unmasking Data’s Healing Powers
How the use of analytics is transforming health care
Growing a Healthcare System
Patty Maysent ('90), CEO, UC San Diego Health
Recorded February 21, 2020
Students and Alumni Focused on Healthcare
Courses
MGMT 298D: Business of Healthcare
MGMT 298D: Quantitative Analysis for Health Systems
Policy M269: Healthcare Finance
MGMT 298: Healthcare Analytics
Not Offered '21-'22
Policy M241: Economics of Health Policy
HLT POL M269: Healthcare Finance
Not Offered '21-'22
HLT POL M241:Economics of Health Policy
Not Offered '21-'22
Healthcare Specialization
The following combination of any of the four courses below are approved for the healthcare specialization in 2023-2024. Substitution requests may be emailed to jennifer.mccaney@anderson.ucla.edu and should be accompanied with a current course syllabus and short justification.
Healthcare joint degree programs are available with our top-ranked UCLA graduate schools
MBA/M.D.
David Geffen School of Medicine
MBA/MPH
Fielding School of Public Health
MBA/MPP
Luskin School of Public Affairs
Other UCLA Anderson Healthcare Student Educational Opportunities
Business Creation Program
UCLA Biodesign Fellowship
Faculty Focused on Healthcare
Harold Williams Chair in Management
Distinguished Professor of Decisions, Operations and Technology Management, Edward W. Carter Chair in Management
Healthcare Research in the UCLA Anderson Review
Was Research — on Physicians and Noncompete Agreements — Before Its Time?
Years after a paper goes unpublished, it’s fodder for a major Federal Trade Commission proposal
Huge Spending — But Little Sharing of Research Results — on Cancer Drugs
U.S. efforts to encourage transparency widely ignored by companies
Can Algorithms Help Reduce Hospital Readmissions?
Measuring the utility of increased care and testing, inputs that aren’t always immediately available
Who Does — and Doesn’t — Suffer From Lack of Competition for Workers
Nurses, cosmetologists and other professionals find wages suppressed more than many lower-skilled workers