

BSc Nursing (Adult)
About this course
Adult nursing is one of the most directly consequential careers there is, concerned with the assessment, care, and treatment of adult patients across an enormous range of clinical settings and conditions. Nurses are often the healthcare professionals who spend the most time with patients, coordinating their care, administering treatments, monitoring their condition, providing emotional support, and communicating with families and the wider clinical team. The degree that qualifies you to practise as a registered nurse is not merely an academic qualification: it is a professional formation that develops clinical skills, ethical judgement, communication ability, and the resilience to work effectively in demanding and sometimes distressing situations. At the University of Huddersfield, adult nursing is studied over three years of full-time study. The programme divides your time between academic study and clinical placements, which means you will spend substantial time working in real clinical environments, developing your practice under the supervision of experienced nurses in settings that may include hospital wards, community health, primary care, and specialist services. The academic curriculum covers anatomy and physiology, pharmacology, pathophysiology, evidence-based practice, nursing assessment, and the ethical and legal frameworks that govern nursing practice. You will develop the skills to assess patients systematically, to plan and deliver nursing care, to administer medications safely, and to work as a collaborative and communicative member of the healthcare team. Successful completion of the programme leads to registration with the Nursing and Midwifery Council as a Registered Nurse (Adult), which is the licence to practise. From there, the career is wide-ranging and can develop in many directions. Clinical nursing in NHS trusts and independent healthcare organisations provides the foundation, with specialisation possible in areas such as critical care, oncology, mental health, and community nursing. Many nurses progress into specialist practice, advanced clinical roles, leadership and management, or education and training. Postgraduate study, including advanced clinical practice programmes and master's degrees in nursing or specialist clinical areas, is available for those who want to develop their expertise and professional scope further.
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