Healthcare is changing fast, but unlike many industries, change in healthcare is never “just” about technology. It is about people, safety, regulation, complex incentives, and systems that must work reliably every single day. Everyone talks about innovation, yet the real challenge is execution: turning good ideas into solutions that improve care, reduce friction, and deliver measurable impact. That is exactly the gap the MBA in Healthcare Innovation at Reichman University, developed in collaboration with Sheba Medical Center (Tel HaShomer), was designed to address.
This one-year, international MBA track, taught entirely in English, brings together the strengths of two institutions uniquely positioned to lead healthcare innovation. Reichman contributes rigorous, state-of-the-art management education and an entrepreneurial mindset. Sheba contributes to the reality of frontline healthcare and is one of the region’s strongest innovation ecosystems, where solutions are tested against real constraints and real needs. Together, they create a learning environment that is not only academically strong but also deeply connected to the field, where innovation is measured by safety, adoption, feasibility, and outcomes.
The program stands on three integrated pillars. The first is a Business Administration core taught through a healthcare lens, building strong managerial fundamentals with direct relevance to health-tech and health systems. Students develop financial fluency and decision-making skills through courses such as Financial Management, Financial Accounting, and Decision-Making Under Uncertainty, and strengthen executive capabilities through Negotiation and Rhetoric: The Art of Speech & Persuasion. The second pillar is Healthcare Management, which provides a practical understanding of how healthcare systems work and how innovation is implemented within them across clinical workflows, operations, incentives, and the broader ecosystem. The third pillar is Innovation & Entrepreneurship, where students learn the full innovation journey, using structured toolkits and frameworks to move from problem identification to solution design, validation, and implementation.
What truly differentiates the program is its applied DNA. Alongside the core courses, students participate in a hands-on practicum in innovation and entrepreneurship throughout the year. Participants can bring their own venture idea or join projects with healthcare organizations and ecosystem partners. The practicum is designed to mirror what innovation leaders actually do: identify unmet needs, build a credible value proposition, test assumptions, navigate stakeholders, and translate an idea into a feasible proof of concept. In a field where many initiatives remain “pilot projects,” the practicum emphasizes what it takes to reach implementation and scale.
A defining feature of the program is the people it brings into the classroom. The faculty includes leading experts from Israel and around the world, scholars and practitioners who combine academic excellence with real-world experience. This creates a learning experience that is both rigorous and relevant, where concepts are connected to real healthcare challenges, and where students gain not only knowledge, but an execution toolkit.
Finally, the program is built around community. The cohort is intentionally diverse, comprising clinicians and health-system leaders, entrepreneurs and product leaders, professionals from pharma, medtech, digital health, consulting, policy, and more. That diversity fuels mutual learning and creates a high-level network that continues long after graduation.
Healthcare needs leaders who can innovate responsibly and deliver. If you want to be the person who not only imagines the future of healthcare but actually builds it, this program is designed for you.
This article was written in cooperation with Reichman University