

BSc Biomedicine
About this course
Biomedicine is the application of biological sciences to the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of human disease. It is an inherently translational field, concerned with closing the gap between what the laboratory reveals about the molecular and cellular basis of illness and what the clinic can do to prevent and treat it. Studying biomedicine means engaging with genetics, biochemistry, cell biology, immunology, pharmacology, and pathology, always with an eye on what these disciplines illuminate about the mechanisms of disease and the possibilities for therapeutic intervention. At the University of East Anglia, you will study biomedicine over three years of full-time study. The curriculum builds from the biological and chemical foundations of life sciences through to more specialised topics in the molecular mechanisms of disease, the immune system and its disorders, cancer biology, infectious disease, and the science of drug action. Laboratory skills are central to the programme, and you will develop practical competence in techniques that are standard in biomedical research and clinical science, including cell culture, molecular biology methods, microscopy, and data analysis. Critical engagement with the scientific literature is embedded throughout, developing your ability to evaluate evidence and communicate scientific ideas clearly. Graduates from biomedicine programmes are well placed for careers in biomedical research, clinical laboratory science, and the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Laboratory roles in NHS clinical pathology and research laboratories employ biomedical scientists, and registration as a Biomedical Scientist with the Health and Care Professions Council is available to graduates who meet the relevant requirements and complete the appropriate supervised practice. Research roles in academic institutions, government agencies, and industry draw on the scientific training the degree provides. Roles in regulatory affairs, clinical research, science communication, and healthcare consultancy are further options. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study, including master's degrees in specialist biomedical areas or doctoral research in a laboratory or clinical setting, which is often required for senior research positions.
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