If you're looking to study medicine at an associate or bachelor degree level, try medical laboratory science! It's a dwindling but very necessary field! We hlep in the diagnosis and treatment of patients without having to interact with the patients directly. We get to use microscopes and cutting-edge technology. If blood freaks you out it might not be the right track, but it is a very satisfying career.
Hey sorry to bother, but do you know any high paying jobs that require at most a masters with that major? I’m going to be a freshman in college next year, and I just picked that major because it sounded interesting, but I’m still not sure if that’s the one for me.
@@chinosonwanebi2191 Clinical Lab Technician is a good one! I'm in for it and it makes 40 to 60 k (18 to 23 an hour) with the bare minimum, and the maximum is a bachelor's. You can move up in immunology and other things later if you want, but you don't need a master's in it.
@@chinosonwanebi2191 HI! There are Master degree holders in the medical lab but they mostly specialize in microbiology and probably in places that do transplants and other specialized departments. I'm not sure what the salary would be. I have an associate degree and travel the Midwest making roughly 100k/year as a generalist.
@@dennysdonuts4918 but scientists are mostly short-staffed which is why they burn out soon. From the perspective of work-life balance, may be CLS isn’t a great option.
I went through some pretty heavy childhood trauma, and I coped by being a helper, a fixer, a tiny shoulder for the grownups in my life to cry and lean on. I was always told I had a way of making people around me feel better. Fast forward a decade and I'm in a high school nursing course. I immediately felt a click! But I have this thing about touching and being touched - I just... no. Not unless we're close, and even then I can be wary. So I knew no clinical care for me! Sadly, it took me a decade before I'd pursue a job in healthcare, but now I've worked in several departments and it's helped me kind of narrow down what I want to focus on. I'm blessed that my employer is sending me back to school with a full grant, and I am going for my degree in Healthcare Administration. It's with U of A instead of ASU (go Wildcats!), I'm about halfway through my degree progress and I found this video really helpful. It reminded me of my Why. It also reminded me to look at what the different classes have to offer me along my journey. I really appreciate that refocus!
Health Science is the easy version of Biology degree. A lot of people that was struggling with bio degree or students that want to have fun and not stressed out all the time pick this major over biology. Health Science is an easy degree to get if you might still want to go to medical or other graduate level graduate school. Most people will simply take the missing pre-rec courses later if they do decide to go that route.
I'm about to wrap this degree up at ASU specifically. 7:51 is 100% accurate. DO NOT get this degree without a plan/hoping to get a job with it alone. I'm going to be using it with an MSW. I think people misunderstand what this degree really is, it's a complimentary knowledge degree, not something that teaches you skills to outright get work. There's exceptions, but be realistic.
7:50 Is the exact dilemma I am currently in. 😭 I finished my Bachelors of Health Sciences degree and really don't want to get into more schooling.. but I can't seem to find a single well-paying career that requires just a Bachelors of Health Sciences degree (because they all require more schooling) so now I'm stuck. 😔
Can you be a laboratory technician? There's an exam and if you have enough expirence you may be able to take it without a specific program but I'm just a freshman so IDK if you're allowed or can but it pays well
There's a few cert-like programs to pivot into a skilled healthcare career (mls, etc.) but they're very difficult and sometimes may not be available. I'd suggest just dealing with getting a master's though. And just for posterity do not get an MHA, MPH, etc. Those are programs for people who already got their foot in the door some time ago and are wanting to level up.
I majored in health science and am currently trying to peruse occupational therapy. Overall it’s a pretty chill degree with the expectations of anatomy and pys😅 but it’s a good gateway to grad school programs
This doesn’t really go over how many different careers you could obtain with this degree. It’s almost completely interchangeable with a healthcare administration degree. I plan on going into sales of surgical technology or pharmaceutical sales. Which make a lot more in income then the examples used in this video
@@دكتوورمومو I did major in health science! I recently graduated, so I’m currently on the job hunt. The job market isn’t the best right now, so I’m still searching.
Awesome video!! Have you guys thought of doing one for lab medicine? I'm a recent grad and it seems like it's a field that nobody I know/knew in college knows about as an option to study!
This! An ER can't be open without a supporting lab and imaging professionals. Allied health, in general, could use a lot more publicity. The people who perform diagnostic procedures (lab, imaging, pathology, etc.) are just as needed as the diagnosers and caretakers. We're also experiencing a critical shortage of staffing too.
Though one is not intended to cure or prevent illness I feel like health science is more showing how to be giving the Treatments so that overtime it reduces How Long it takes for somebody to be cured or how long the illness can span. And not how to detect the Infection
📍Bauer College of Business 📍Hankamer College of Business 📍Mendoza College of Business 📍Marshall College of Business 📍Mays College of Business 📍Lundquist College of Business 📍Alvarez College of Business 📍Mendoza College of Business 📍Harvard College of Business 📍Katz College of Business 📍McCoy College of Business 📍Lundquist College of Business
Hi Gabby, check out Brandeis University (Health:Science,Society, and Policy major). I also know that Emory University has a good program (Human Health major).
Looking to become a physician assistant so I’m seeing degree for bsn and healthcare. Just want to choose the right school I don’t want to waste time and money. Any advise?
I'm considering a public health degree and this looks to essentially be the same, though I'm finding information saying they're different. Anyone know if they're actually interchangeable? 👀
They’re not the same, public health focuses much more on administrative and statistics whereas Health Sciences is more broad and focuses more on humanities
Nursing is very stringent with their academic path. You must complete a BSN basically. Lots of schools will require certain classes to be done prior to applying to BSN programs too, which health sciences wouldn't aid you with.
@@Andp4503 I actually ended up taking a special type of associates program for health science that is pre-nursing classes and nursing classes. I graduate in October and my BSN will only take 2 years instead of 4 due to me having half my classes already finished. Been doing well with a 4.0 gpa, just finished A/P 2 and am in Pathophysiology and Chemistry. Was really cheap to. 😊
I have done bachelor in pharmacy and I am planning to do masters in health science and health services management in Australia . Guys can you please give me a good advice?? Which course should I do?? Plz reply.
A Health Sciences degree will more than likely get you no where. It doesn't give you any marketable skills. This guy is just trying to put butts in seats for his lame college.
Yeesh. “Health Science” is not a real field, and this video basically admits as much. If you already have a two year degree in something like Radiologic Technology or Respiratory Therapy to build on, then Health Science might be an easy 4 year degree if you’re looking to check that box.
I'm starting health science. I have 2 nutrition courses. If I wanted to be a nutritionist, I could use these courses to count towards any separate extra schooling required. I couldn't be certified as a nutritionist just because I took those 2 courses though. Get what I mean? Have a good day.
If you're looking to study medicine at an associate or bachelor degree level, try medical laboratory science! It's a dwindling but very necessary field! We hlep in the diagnosis and treatment of patients without having to interact with the patients directly. We get to use microscopes and cutting-edge technology. If blood freaks you out it might not be the right track, but it is a very satisfying career.
Hey sorry to bother, but do you know any high paying jobs that require at most a masters with that major? I’m going to be a freshman in college next year, and I just picked that major because it sounded interesting, but I’m still not sure if that’s the one for me.
@@chinosonwanebi2191 Clinical Lab Technician is a good one! I'm in for it and it makes 40 to 60 k (18 to 23 an hour) with the bare minimum, and the maximum is a bachelor's. You can move up in immunology and other things later if you want, but you don't need a master's in it.
@@chinosonwanebi2191 HI! There are Master degree holders in the medical lab but they mostly specialize in microbiology and probably in places that do transplants and other specialized departments. I'm not sure what the salary would be. I have an associate degree and travel the Midwest making roughly 100k/year as a generalist.
@@dennysdonuts4918 but scientists are mostly short-staffed which is why they burn out soon. From the perspective of work-life balance, may be CLS isn’t a great option.
4⁴⁴4
I went through some pretty heavy childhood trauma, and I coped by being a helper, a fixer, a tiny shoulder for the grownups in my life to cry and lean on. I was always told I had a way of making people around me feel better.
Fast forward a decade and I'm in a high school nursing course. I immediately felt a click! But I have this thing about touching and being touched - I just... no. Not unless we're close, and even then I can be wary. So I knew no clinical care for me!
Sadly, it took me a decade before I'd pursue a job in healthcare, but now I've worked in several departments and it's helped me kind of narrow down what I want to focus on.
I'm blessed that my employer is sending me back to school with a full grant, and I am going for my degree in Healthcare Administration. It's with U of A instead of ASU (go Wildcats!), I'm about halfway through my degree progress and I found this video really helpful.
It reminded me of my Why. It also reminded me to look at what the different classes have to offer me along my journey. I really appreciate that refocus!
It sounds like you found something you enjoy
I am exploring my options right now
So glad you explored options to find out the pros and cons and ultimately, a good fit in Healthcare Administration w/no student loans!!! Best wishes!
Health Science is the easy version of Biology degree. A lot of people that was struggling with bio degree or students that want to have fun and not stressed out all the time pick this major over biology. Health Science is an easy degree to get if you might still want to go to medical or other graduate level graduate school. Most people will simply take the missing pre-rec courses later if they do decide to go that route.
Bingo.
Maybe in Undergrad lol 😂🤷🏽♂ In Grad school it's the opposite!
@@rodthegreat5083can u elaborate pls?
For real though!!😂 that’s me right now… Biology degree was stressing me out so here I am😬
I'm about to wrap this degree up at ASU specifically. 7:51 is 100% accurate. DO NOT get this degree without a plan/hoping to get a job with it alone. I'm going to be using it with an MSW. I think people misunderstand what this degree really is, it's a complimentary knowledge degree, not something that teaches you skills to outright get work. There's exceptions, but be realistic.
Hey I was looking into ASU. Could you please help me out with it?
I couldn’t agreeeee more! I finished 6 months ago and my God….i feel stupid for not getting something more specific 😂
I majored in Health Science and Policy at Brandeis, I highly recommend the program!!!
7:50 Is the exact dilemma I am currently in. 😭 I finished my Bachelors of Health Sciences degree and really don't want to get into more schooling.. but I can't seem to find a single well-paying career that requires just a Bachelors of Health Sciences degree (because they all require more schooling) so now I'm stuck. 😔
Can you be a laboratory technician? There's an exam and if you have enough expirence you may be able to take it without a specific program but I'm just a freshman so IDK if you're allowed or can but it pays well
Bro I have F1 interview please help
There's a few cert-like programs to pivot into a skilled healthcare career (mls, etc.) but they're very difficult and sometimes may not be available. I'd suggest just dealing with getting a master's though. And just for posterity do not get an MHA, MPH, etc. Those are programs for people who already got their foot in the door some time ago and are wanting to level up.
I'm now learning medical Terminology for healthcare because I'm interested working to become a personal trainer, or medical assistant!!
Could you do an episode on pre-med? thanks
yesss this!! i would loooveee to know what options there could be that i might not even have thought of!
I second that
No
Pre med is not a major, it's a set of prerequisite science courses meant to prepare you for the MCAT and medical school applications.
I'm actually using this degree path as a pre med option
Wish I had these videos before I went to school!
I majored in health science and am currently trying to peruse occupational therapy. Overall it’s a pretty chill degree with the expectations of anatomy and pys😅 but it’s a good gateway to grad school programs
This doesn’t really go over how many different careers you could obtain with this degree. It’s almost completely interchangeable with a healthcare administration degree. I plan on going into sales of surgical technology or pharmaceutical sales. Which make a lot more in income then the examples used in this video
you were a health science major? were you able to find a job out of college?
Did you majored in health since?
@@jilliansmith1979 hi 👋
What have you done over the past year regarding this topic?
@@jilliansmith1979
I want to benefit from your experiences 🙏 ❤
@@دكتوورمومو I did major in health science! I recently graduated, so I’m currently on the job hunt. The job market isn’t the best right now, so I’m still searching.
I liked studying Health Sciences. My coursework was all over the place but so are my interests lol
A critical field, especially in the post-RoevWade world :/
Awesome video!! Have you guys thought of doing one for lab medicine? I'm a recent grad and it seems like it's a field that nobody I know/knew in college knows about as an option to study!
I'm in for clinical lab science and oh my God, there's so little info
@@dennysdonuts4918 this is one of my second options for school is I can't get into radiology, and I cannot see much info on this 😔
This! An ER can't be open without a supporting lab and imaging professionals. Allied health, in general, could use a lot more publicity. The people who perform diagnostic procedures (lab, imaging, pathology, etc.) are just as needed as the diagnosers and caretakers. We're also experiencing a critical shortage of staffing too.
Thank you I did not know that was a major
This is giving me a courage to study health science
Science is my best subject and i like watching science, thanks very much sir❤
Can you please do a video on Kinesiology?
FABULOUS overview!! ty
Though one is not intended to cure or prevent illness I feel like health science is more showing how to be giving the Treatments so that overtime it reduces How Long it takes for somebody to be cured or how long the illness can span. And not how to detect the Infection
Public administration drove me into public health....after a couple decades in the the mllitary health system.
Good video I don’t get the conceptions of Med school but I do know it has much to do with how Health Science has developed.
📍Bauer College of Business
📍Hankamer College of Business
📍Mendoza College of Business
📍Marshall College of Business
📍Mays College of Business
📍Lundquist College of Business
📍Alvarez College of Business
📍Mendoza College of Business
📍Harvard College of Business
📍Katz College of Business
📍McCoy College of Business
📍Lundquist College of Business
My university groups psych majors in the human health sciences. 🤦♀️
Last academic year we were a part of the college of Liberal Arts. 🤦♀️
Can we have a video on nutrition plesse
Can you do Healthcare administration? Thanks.
pre med pleaaaaseeeeeeeee
And how soon the treatment must be given to a Seeing at what rate does the treatment work and seeing the symptoms go away.
Super helpful ... Thank you !
Can you add Arabic subtitles to this video?
could you mention some well-known colleges that actually offer this major ?because i’m having trouble finding many that offer it.
Hi Gabby, check out Brandeis University (Health:Science,Society, and Policy major). I also know that Emory University has a good program (Human Health major).
@@allisonhughes5812 A well as Baylor university!
University of South Florida has it!
South University.
Western Governors University has it
What is first year course of health science
Looking to become a physician assistant so I’m seeing degree for bsn and healthcare. Just want to choose the right school I don’t want to waste time and money. Any advise?
If I want to peruse a career in medicine, can I get a bachelors in health science and get admission in med school??
I'm considering a public health degree and this looks to essentially be the same, though I'm finding information saying they're different. Anyone know if they're actually interchangeable? 👀
They’re not the same, public health focuses much more on administrative and statistics whereas Health Sciences is more broad and focuses more on humanities
@@bintisf Thank you!
@holysaby Wow, Health Sciences is a very important major, I never knew that. Good luck, Allahumma Baarik
Very nice information about me
I want to be an RN? Would health science be a good foundation to start with?
No, ADN would be better
Nursing is very stringent with their academic path. You must complete a BSN basically. Lots of schools will require certain classes to be done prior to applying to BSN programs too, which health sciences wouldn't aid you with.
@@Andp4503 I actually ended up taking a special type of associates program for health science that is pre-nursing classes and nursing classes. I graduate in October and my BSN will only take 2 years instead of 4 due to me having half my classes already finished. Been doing well with a 4.0 gpa, just finished A/P 2 and am in Pathophysiology and Chemistry. Was really cheap to. 😊
Yes it's a good foundation. You can do a accelerated ADN program don't listen to idiots.
I have done bachelor in pharmacy and I am planning to do masters in health science and health services management in Australia . Guys can you please give me a good advice?? Which course should I do?? Plz reply.
You guys should do a music degree
U the crash course guy ?
Yup that's Hank Green
A Health Sciences degree will more than likely get you no where. It doesn't give you any marketable skills. This guy is just trying to put butts in seats for his lame college.
Yeesh. “Health Science” is not a real field, and this video basically admits as much. If you already have a two year degree in something like Radiologic Technology or Respiratory Therapy to build on, then Health Science might be an easy 4 year degree if you’re looking to check that box.
Does it contain being nutritionist ?? Please answer my questions ❤️🩹
I'm starting health science. I have 2 nutrition courses. If I wanted to be a nutritionist, I could use these courses to count towards any separate extra schooling required. I couldn't be certified as a nutritionist just because I took those 2 courses though. Get what I mean? Have a good day.