

BSc Medical Biosciences
About this course
Medical biosciences applies the tools and concepts of modern biology to the understanding of human health and disease. It is a discipline that sits at the interface between fundamental biological research and clinical medicine, examining how cells malfunction in cancer, how the immune system responds to infection, how drugs interact with their molecular targets, and how genetic variation shapes disease risk. For students who want to engage deeply with the science that underpins medicine, without following the clinical training pathway, medical biosciences offers a rigorous and intellectually demanding alternative. At Imperial College London, the BSc Medical Biosciences programme is taught within one of the world's leading research universities, with close links to major clinical facilities and a strong culture of scientific enquiry. You will study the molecular, cellular, and physiological foundations of human biology, building a thorough understanding of how the body works and how its systems can fail. You will engage with areas including pharmacology, immunology, genetics, cell biology, and pathophysiology, developing the scientific literacy to evaluate current research and to think critically about biomedical evidence. Practical laboratory work is central to the degree, giving you hands-on experience with the techniques and instruments used in biomedical research. You will develop strong quantitative and analytical skills, the ability to interpret complex data, and the capacity to communicate scientific ideas clearly. These capabilities are valued both within the life sciences and in the many sectors where understanding biology at a mechanistic level is important. Graduates from medical biosciences programmes work in pharmaceutical and biotechnology research, clinical research organisations, regulatory affairs, health policy, medical writing, and science communication. The degree also provides strong preparation for postgraduate study in biomedical science, pharmacology, immunology, or related fields, and many graduates pursue doctoral research. Entry to graduate-entry medicine or other health professional training is another route taken by a proportion of medical biosciences graduates.
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