

BEng Medical Engineering
About this course
Medical engineering applies engineering principles to the problems of healthcare, working at the boundary between technology and medicine to design, develop and test the devices and systems that support clinical care. Whether that is a wearable sensor for monitoring chronic conditions, a biomaterial designed to integrate with living tissue, an implant that must function reliably inside the human body for decades, or the complex systems that enable modern operating theatres to function safely, medical engineers must think simultaneously about human biology, materials science, electronics, mechanics and regulatory frameworks. At the University of Leeds you will study for three years full-time, developing the broad range of technical and scientific skills that healthcare technology demands. You will cover fundamental engineering principles alongside biology and physiology, learning to apply quantitative analysis to clinical problems and to consider the human, ethical and environmental dimensions of healthcare technology design. The programme includes a sandwich year in professional practice and a year abroad, giving you extended engineering industry experience and international exposure. Your placement year is particularly valuable in medical engineering, where practical experience in a clinical or industrial context develops the contextual understanding that makes a graduate genuinely useful to employers in this highly regulated sector. Medical engineering graduates work in the medical devices and diagnostics industries, in NHS clinical engineering departments, in medical technology start-ups and in large healthcare companies. Roles include product development, clinical applications, regulatory affairs, quality assurance and biomedical engineering support within hospitals. The intersection of engineering and healthcare also opens paths into research and development, where the drive to create more effective, safer and more sustainable healthcare technologies is ongoing. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in medical engineering, biomedical science or related fields, and the sector's consistent growth makes it one of the more reliably expanding areas of engineering employment.
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