

BSc Nursing (Adult)
About this course
Adult nursing is the professional degree that prepares you to work as a registered nurse caring for adults across the full spectrum of health conditions and clinical settings. Nurses spend more time with patients than almost any other healthcare professional, providing direct care, monitoring health status, administering treatments, supporting patients through the emotional and practical challenges of illness, and coordinating with the wider clinical team. It is a profession that combines rigorous scientific knowledge with highly developed interpersonal skills, emotional intelligence, and the resilience to work effectively in demanding environments. At the University of East Anglia, adult nursing is studied over three years of full-time study. The programme divides your time between academic work and clinical placements in NHS and other healthcare settings in East Anglia, giving you extensive hands-on experience caring for patients under the supervision of experienced nurses throughout your degree. The academic curriculum covers anatomy and physiology, pharmacology and medicines management, pathophysiology, evidence-based nursing practice, nursing assessment and care planning, and the ethical and legal frameworks that govern professional nursing practice. You will develop the clinical skills needed to assess patients holistically, to plan and deliver nursing care safely and effectively, and to work as part of interprofessional teams in hospitals, community settings, and other healthcare environments. Successful completion of the programme leads to registration with the Nursing and Midwifery Council as a Registered Nurse (Adult), which is the professional qualification required to practise as a nurse in the UK. The career that follows is both broad and genuinely meaningful. Nurses work across hospital wards, intensive care units, community health, primary care, mental health services, and many other settings, with the opportunity to specialise as your career develops. Specialist practice roles, advanced clinical practice, nurse leadership, education, and research are all paths open to registered nurses. Postgraduate study at masters level supports specialist and advanced practice development, and there is growing demand for nurses with higher-level clinical and leadership qualifications.
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