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BSc Biomedical Science with Integrated Foundation Year
About this course
Biomedical science is the discipline that connects the laboratory to the clinic, applying biological and chemical knowledge to the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. Biomedical scientists work at the interface of science and medicine, providing the analytical expertise on which clinical decisions depend: from haematology and clinical biochemistry to medical microbiology and cellular pathology. At the University of Sunderland, the BSc Biomedical Science with Integrated Foundation Year is a four-year full-time programme designed to provide a supported entry into degree-level study for those returning to education or who did not meet the standard entry requirements. The integrated foundation year provides the scientific preparation, study skills, and confidence needed before progressing into the main biomedical science degree. From the foundation year you move into a curriculum that covers human anatomy and physiology, biochemistry, microbiology, haematology, histopathology, clinical chemistry, and immunology, developing both the theoretical understanding of how these fields relate to health and disease and the practical laboratory skills that biomedical science practice requires. Laboratory work is central to the degree: you will spend substantial time developing the technical accuracy and professional rigour that clinical laboratory work demands, learning to handle samples, operate instruments, and interpret results with the precision that patient safety requires. Biomedical science graduates work across the NHS, private healthcare, and the life sciences industry. The most direct clinical pathway leads to registration as a Biomedical Scientist with the Health and Care Professions Council, which requires both a degree and a period of supervised professional practice. NHS laboratory departments in haematology, biochemistry, microbiology, blood transfusion, and histopathology all employ registered biomedical scientists. Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies also recruit biomedical scientists in research, development, and quality control roles. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in specialist areas of biomedical science, clinical research, or related health professions. The integrated foundation year makes this career pathway accessible to a broader range of students without reducing the rigour of the professional qualification it leads towards.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (75% response rate)
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