

MEng Biomedical Engineering
About this course
Biomedical engineering applies the principles of engineering and physical science to the challenges of medicine and biology. It is a discipline born from the recognition that many of the most important problems in healthcare, from understanding how the heart pumps blood to designing a prosthetic limb or building a diagnostic scanner, are fundamentally engineering problems. Biomedical engineers work at the intersection of clinical need and technical innovation, developing the devices, materials and systems that modern medicine depends on. At the University of Hull, the four-year full-time degree builds your understanding of engineering fundamentals alongside the biological and physiological knowledge you need to apply them in a medical context. You will study areas including biomechanics, biomaterials, medical imaging, signal processing and the design of medical devices. The programme includes visits to local hospitals, giving you early exposure to clinical environments and the practical challenges that healthcare professionals face. This grounding in real-world medical settings shapes your understanding of what engineering solutions need to achieve and why. Biomedical engineering draws on multiple disciplines, and you will need to think across them: understanding how a material behaves inside the body requires knowledge of chemistry as well as mechanics; designing a monitoring device requires knowledge of physiology as well as electronics. The degree develops this kind of integrative thinking, alongside the laboratory skills and project management capabilities that employers expect from engineering graduates. Graduates work in medical device companies, hospital engineering departments, the pharmaceutical industry and research institutions. Roles span device development, clinical engineering, regulatory affairs and technical sales. Many graduates pursue chartered engineer status through professional bodies. For those drawn to research and innovation, postgraduate study in biomedical engineering, medical physics or biomaterials is a natural next step.
Syllabus & Modules
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