Schools that offer bachelors degrees do not have 'paralegal programs.' Sadly, even though neither law school nor med school technically requires that you have a bachelors degree, they require that you have 120 credits. And, many of the schools advertised on tv with 'paralegal' programs and so on, are not accredited, meaning the credits do not transfer.
If you truly want to go to law school or med school you need to go to a real, 4 year college.
A state school is fine, but it has to be a true 4 year college. The first year or 2 will be general education, math, science, history, english etc. After that, you must declare a major. If you decide to try to go to law school, you will want to go in the "Pre-Law" track, however, because Pre-Law is not a major, a good major would be English, History, or Philosophy. If you should decide to go the medical school route, a major in Biochemistry, Biomedical Sciences etc, would be useful. However, the sooner you decide the better because both require hard, hard, tests. Law school requires LSATs, Med School requires MCATs, both want volunteer work..which you want to start as a freshman in college etc.
Also, you do not change your major in medical school. Medical school is something that only few people are accepted into, it is after you get your bachelors degree, and those who graduate, graduate with an M.D.
However, to be a pharmacist, you would not go to medical school, you would go to pharmacy school. If this is what you desire, you still need a 4 year college, and good choices for a major include Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Whether you decide to pursue Med School, Law School or Pharmacy School, you need as close to a 4.0 as possible, lots of volunteer work, extracirricular activities, excellent letters of recommendation, and something that puts you "ahead" of everyone else and makes you special.
Whatever school you are currently considering going to is probably a scam school. Sure, they have classrooms, but if they are not regionally accredited, you've got nothing. An example of a "scam school" is PIMA medical institute; credits do NOT transfer to any other university or school, yet admissions people attempt to reel students in with "lifetime job placement" and right underneath that great deal, it says "lifetime job placement" means access to their career counselor, and that they will forward your transcripts. It sounds like whatever school you are considering may also be a scam.
Even if you can not afford, or do not wish to go to a 4 year college right away, you should go to a community college and get a real education. It also wouldn't hurt to do some more research about these careers you have in mind, as questions like this would sadly result in admissions representatives being rude to you.