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Master's Degree

Master of Applied Science (MAS) in Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality

Online | Part-Time | 24 years

About the MAS in Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality Program

The Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality master’s program is an interdisciplinary degree offered by the Johns Hopkins University. It is a first of its kind collaboration between the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing and the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. It combines coursework from JHU’s top-ranked schools with the Armstrong Institute’s pioneering advances in patient safety. This online program is designed to educate students in the transformative mechanisms and evidence-based protocols that reduce preventable patient harm and improve clinical outcomes. View the curriculum.

MAS in Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality Program Highlights

Led by renowned experts

Including one of the world’s leading authorities on patient safety, Dr. Peter Pronovost, Former Director of the Armstrong Institute, and Former Senior Vice President for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins Medicine

Online

Online delivery gives flexibility and accessibility to students around the world

Competitive tuition

All students enrolled in an Applied Science Certificate or Master program are awarded a scholarship 

take your career to the next level

Degree program adds to your current experience to take your career to the next level

Hear From Our Students, Alumni, and Faculty

"The MAS program served as the perfect source of inspiration for me. Despite being a distance learning course, the interaction with faculty and classmates both in asynchronous and synchronous fashion felt as if I was attending the course in person. The modules and assignments were perfectly designed for working professionals with a background knowledge in the area. Thanks to this program, I have found a role that I really love in the health policy space while continuing my work as a clinician part time. Thank you for such an amazing and fruitful experience!"

    ~MAS graduate, 202

The Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality Movement

"Organizations profess patient safety as a top priority, but they are still figuring out how to manage it with the same rigor, discipline and accountability that they do their budgets."
– Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD, FCCM

The year 2000 marked the birth of the patient safety movement. Its focus: to end preventable harm and improve patient outcomes and experiences in health care. Since then, there has been groundbreaking work and innovation across the continuum of care. Advances in the science of safety have allowed meaningful discoveries that highlight defective processes. Resulting risk reduction strategies are being implemented, leading to greater efficiency and performance improvement.

This movement has much more to accomplish and great potential to drive further widespread advances in safety and quality. Re-engineering care is rife with complexities. There are hierarchies, limited funding, high patient volumes, time pressures, interruptions, distractions, communication challenges, and siloed data. Making changes can feel like a colossal task. The great news – we CAN effect change. In fact, we are already doing it.

the impact on public health

The patient safety problem is staggering. For instance:

  • More than one in ten hospitalized people are harmed while receiving care
  • One in ten hospitalized patients acquire health care associated infections
  • Every American will experience a missed or delayed diagnosis at some point in his or her lifetime
  • There are at least 1.5 million preventable adverse drug events in the U.S. every year

What Can You Do With a Graduate Degree In Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality?

It can turn your passion for patient safety into a career in which you help to lead the charge. The Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality master’s program focuses on the measurement of safety and quality, designing safer systems, organizational and cultural change, patient-centric care and preventing patient harm. Visit the Graduate Employment Outcomes Dashboard to learn about Bloomberg School graduates' employment status, sector, and salaries.

Sample Careers

  • Director of Quality Management and Patient Safety Officer
  • Director or VP of Quality Outcomes/Assurance/Patient Safety
  • Patient Safety Officer or Consultant
  • RN Director of Clinical Quality Improvement
  • Director of Clinical Professional Services
  • Quality & Outcome Data Specialist
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LEARN MORE about careers in patient safety

Curriculum for the MAS in Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality

Browse an overview of the requirements for this master's program in the JHU Academic Catalogue and explore all course offerings in the Bloomberg School Course Directory

48.5

credits

17

required courses

1

culminating project

Admissions Requirements

For the general admissions requirements see our How to Apply page. The specific program also requires:

Prior Work Experience

3+ years of post-baccalaureate health-related experience

Standardized Test Scores

Standardized test scores are not required and not reviewed for this program. If you have taken a standardized test such as the GRE, GMAT, or MCAT and want to submit your scores, please note that they will not be used as a metric during the application review. Applications will be reviewed holistically based on all required application components.

Application Specials

Ask about our monthly application specials!

Applications have closed for the 2024 program starts. The application for August 2025 program starts will open in mid-August 2024 in SOPHAS and SOPHAS Express.

Please email mas-office@jh.edu prior to submitting your application for further instructions! 

Program Faculty Spotlights

Albert Wu
Professor
Health Policy and Management

Albert Wu, MD, MPH, studies the impact of safety problems on patients and health care workers.

Tuition and Funding

The MAS programs have competitive price points and substantial tuition scholarships. The admission application also serves as your scholarship application. All admitted students are awarded the MAS scholarship.

Contact Us

Questions about the program? We're happy to help.

Request more information or call us at 410-955-3543 to speak with an admissions officer. You can also reach us via email at BSPH.Admissions@jhu.edu.
 

Elizabeth F. Topper, PhD, MEd, MPH
Research Professor, and Director, Master of Applied Science (MAS) Program Office

Albert Wu, MD
Professor, and Director, MAS in Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality

Christina Potter, MBA
Academic Program Manager, Master of Applied Science (MAS) Program Office
MAS-Office@jhu.edu

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