2026 Best Value Maternal/Child Health and Neonatal Nurse/Nursing Schools in Nebraska

[Maternal/Child Health and Neonatal Nurse/Nursing](/majors/health-care-professions/nursing/maternal-child-health-and-neonatal-nurse-nursing/) degree programs vary widely in price and payoff across the country. The schools below stand out for delivering a strong maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing education at a price that pays off.
For its 2026 best-value ranking, College Factual looked at 1 schools to find the best return on investment for maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing students.
What’s on this page:
2026 Best Value Maternal/Child Health and Neonatal Nurse/Nursing Schools in Nebraska
Below are the schools that deliver the strongest value in maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing, balancing cost against outcomes.
Best Value Maternal/Child Health and Neonatal Nurse/Nursing Schools
For return on investment in maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing, no school beat Creighton University this year. Creighton University is a moderately-sized private not-for-profit school located in the city of Omaha. Students from in state pay about $48,856 in tuition and fees. Students borrow a median of $27,000 to complete the maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing program here. Early-career maternal/child health and neonatal nurse/nursing graduates make about $96,152. Set against $27,000 in median debt, that is a healthy payoff. The acceptance rate is 80%.
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Notes and References
The ranking above is published by College Factual (MF_RANKING_2025), 2026 edition. Schools are scored on the balance of cost (tuition and student debt) against student outcomes (post-graduation earnings) — a measure of return on investment, drawn primarily from the U.S. Department of Education (IPEDS and College Scorecard).
Ranking method: College Major Best Value · 1 school evaluated.
*Averages shown above reflect the top 1 ranked schools only.
- The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a branch of the U.S. Department of Education (DOE), serves as the core of our data about colleges.
- Some other college data, including much of the graduate earnings data, comes from the U.S. Department of Education’s (College Scorecard).
More about our data sources and methodologies.