If you want to end up in the Northeast or Chicago, it's either Ross or Cornell. That money from Emory and Owens won't make up the potential short-term recruiting downfalls vs. Ross/Cornell.
Emory gets 30% of their class into consulting, which is 50 people. Everyone will be fighting even for those non-MBB spots. I was told that MBB only gives a handful of offers each year there, which basically go to your full scholarship candidates. So it'll be a blood bath even for Deloitte, Accenture, EY, ZS Associates, etc. which will be everyone's realistic target firms. Additionally, only 7% of students go to the Midwest and 18% go to the Northeast. I doubt many, if any, recruiters from offices at your desired locations go to Emory. And if they did, you're competing against EVERYONE from Kellogg, Ross, CBS, MIT, HBS, Booth, Tuck, etc. Chances are slim to none.
At Ross or Cornell, everyone's top consulting choices are MBB, so essentially your target firms are everyone else's second choice, which means you stand out when you connect with them and build relationships for those interview invites and offers.
My thoughts are you either go Ross/Cornell or get a part-time MBA. The only logical reason for Emory is if you can get through the recruiting bloodbath and don't mind being in Atlanta making $140K salary, which isn't bad, but doesn't really align with your preferences at all. And that network doesn't really work well for your target locations.
The whole paying less debt thing is nice upfront, but it really inhibits people's future potential if the right decision isn't made. Also, if I were you, I'd try Kellogg. You can do healthcare at any consulting firm. Choosing a school for their "specialization" is quite falsely overemphasized, like Yale for nonprofit, UCLA for entertainment, Columbia for Finance, Duke for healthcare. These specialties are such a small portion of their recruitment that it's almost negligible. You want the best firms that'll get you a shot to work on the industries and projects you prefer, and that's by going to target schools.