NHS Scientist Training Programme (STP)
By UCL Careers, on 23 December 2014
This post originally appeared on the QM Jobs blog
The NHS Scientist Training Programme will open in January 2015. The STP is a graduate-entry programme for scientists, where you are paid a salary by the NHS while training.
Postgraduate training for the STP leads to a specifically commissioned and accredited master’s degree and certification of achievement of work-based training following one of nine themed pathways:
- microbiology(infection control and epidemiology, mycology, virology, toxicology, bacteriology and parasitology)
- blood sciences (clinical biochemistry, haematology/transfusion science, immunology)
- cellular sciences (histopathology, cytopathology, reproductive science)
- genetic sciences (genetic science, bioinformatic genomics)
- neurosensory sciences (audiology, neurophysiology, ophthalmic and vision science)
- cardiovascular respiratory and sleep sciences (cardiac science, respiratory and sleep science, vascular science, critical care science)
- gastrointestinal physiology and urodynamic sciences
- clinical engineering (rehabilitation engineering, clinical measurement and development, medical device risk management and governance), reconstructive sciences (maxillofacial prosthetics)
- medical physics (radiation safety physics, radiotherapy physics, imaging with ionising radiation, imaging with non-ionising radiation, clinical pharmaceutical science)
- informatics (genomics, physical sciences, health infomatics)
For more on the STP application process see here. And if you’re a scientist and want to talk about your career options, why not book an appointment to see one of our Careers Consultants? www.ucl.ac.uk/careers