Your future
Health Sciences is a rapidly evolving and innovative field with a growing demand for specialised professionals. The curriculum prepares you for a career as a researcher or professional who makes an impact within academia or healthcare. The programme opens the door to a wide range of career opportunities in hospitals, local and national organisations, universities, research centres, and companies. For example, you could work at government agencies, policy institutions, research organisations, healthcare providers, or public health institutes.
Connecting master's programmes
English master's programmes
- Biomedical Sciences
- Epidemiology
- Governance and Leadership in European Public Health
- Global Health
- Healthcare Policy, Innovation and Management
- Health and Digital Transformation
- Health Promotion
- Health Food Innovation Management (Campus Venlo)
Dutch master's programmes
- Mental Health (a selection procedure applies to this master's programme) (this master's is offered by the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience)
- Research Master Physician-Clinical Investigator (a selection procedure applies to this master's programme)
Career paths
After you've finished this programme, you could pursue a career in policy making, management, research or education.
Policy
Policy advisors help prepare, formulate and implement policies within their own area of expertise. Many Health Sciences graduates end up working as a policy advisor at national and international governments, and other healthcare-related organisations .
Management
Managers are responsible for supervising the activities within a department, they are also responsible for maintaining a high level of quality. Health Sciences graduates often end up working as health managers or HR advisors.
Research
A scientific researcher conducts research and reports the results. Some Health Sciences graduates decide to pursue a PhD after their graduation. They specialise in a topic that they have studied during the programme. Other Health Sciences graduates become researchers at commercial organisations, in the food industry, for example, or at a pharmaceutical company.
Education
If you take the education minor within the bachelor Health Sciences - Biology perspective, you can become a biology teacher at a secondary school, or work as an instructor in tertiary and higher education.
You can find more information about the education minor in the paragraph Courses & curriculum from the bachelor's in Biomedical Sciences (as it is officialy a BMS minor, but it is open to HS students as well).
Prospects
There are plenty of job opportunities for health sciences graduates. Healthcare is one of the fastest growing economic sectors, and this growth is expected to continue in the coming decades. Businesses and institutions developing activities designed to promote good health and healthcare are also on the rise, and international scientific research and education are bolstering this development.
On average, Health Science graduates need less time to find a job than other university graduates. The average Health Sciences graduate in the Netherlands sends out 16 letters of application before they find a job, which is 4 letters less than the national average. Health Sciences graduates also tend to be more satisfied with their programme, they give the programme a 7.3, that's higher than the national average of 6.9.