Top Ranked Programs
Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing's program portfolio is concentrated entirely in health sciences, reflecting its specialized mission as a nursing-focused institution. Registered Nursing is the dominant program, graduating 123 students annually and anchoring the school's educational identity and labor-market outcomes. Across 1 programs serving roughly 123 students, the institution maintains a focused program mix aligned with direct-to-workforce healthcare pathways. The nursing-centered portfolio delivers consistent outcomes in a high-demand field. Registered Nursing graduates enter the labor market directly into stable, well-compensated positions with strong hiring demand across New York's healthcare systems and nationally. The concentration in a single major field means outcomes reflect the earnings trajectory and labor-market dynamics of nursing specifically—a sector characterized by steady wage growth, robust employment prospects, and clear career-progression pathways from entry-level registered nurse roles through advanced practice specializations. This focused program structure differs from broader health-sciences institutions that distribute enrollment across nursing, pre-medicine, public health, and allied health fields. Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing's specialization in nursing creates alignment between institutional identity, curriculum design, and graduate outcomes. The [supply and demand for college graduates](/analysis/supply-demand-map-college-degrees/) provides context for how nursing aligns with national labor-market demand and wage trends in healthcare.