Studying nursing at the °µÍø½âÃÜ will enable you to commence a rewarding career within the health sector. With an ongoing demand for nurses across the UK, employment prospects for nursing graduates remain very good.
As the healthcare sector moves towards more integrated, home and community-based services, the range of opportunities available for newly qualified nurses has never been greater. Our nursing graduates work in a variety of settings, including hospitals, GP practices, hospices, specialist units and in community teams supporting patients in their own homes. In addition to the NHS, there is a large private healthcare sector. Further opportunities exist in prisons, the armed forces and overseas.
As your career develops, you could take on a specialist role. In acute settings, this could include for example (and depending on your chosen branch of nursing) intensive care, diabetes, elderly care or neonatal nursing among many others. Specialisation is also an option in community settings, such as Health Visitor, District Nurse, School Nurse, or Public Health Nurse. Within the field of mental health nursing, specialisations might include substance misuse, offenders, eating disorders and psychotherapeutic interventions.
Progression into management roles can occur relatively early in your career, while others seek opportunities in nursing education, training and clinical research.
*Data is from the Graduate Outcomes Surveys covering the three years of 2019/20 – 2021/22. Graduates were surveyed 15 months after graduating. Data displayed is for UK-domiciled, first degree, full-time graduates who are working, studying or looking for work.