# Health Science Services NHS Jobs in Cambridge

> Health Science Services job landing page for Cambridge from Job Clerk.

## Canonical URLs

- **HTML:** https://www.jobclerk.com/jobs/health-science-services/cambridge
- **Markdown:** https://www.jobclerk.com/jobs/health-science-services/cambridge.md

## Live Market Snapshot

- **Live vacancies:** 5
- **NHS employers:** 1
- **New vacancies this week:** 5
- **Filter scope:** Scoped to Health Science Services and Cambridge.
- **Observed salary range:** GBP 32,073 to GBP 64,750

## Role Summary

NHS health science posts include biomedical scientists, clinical scientists, medical laboratory assistants, healthcare science practitioners, and medical physicists. Most laboratory-based roles require HCPC registration and sit at Band 5 and above. Clinical scientist training typically runs through the competitive NHS Scientist Training Programme.

## Typical Responsibilities

- Quality assurance, EQA, and accreditation compliance (UKAS/ISO 15189)
- Method validation and troubleshooting analytical equipment
- Authorising and interpreting results with clinical context
- Supervising and training support staff and trainees
- Specimen management, sample integrity, and chain of custody
- On-call or out-of-hours cover for urgent diagnostics
- Audit, research, and development of new assays or pathways

## Typical Requirements

- HCPC registration (for biomedical scientist and clinical scientist roles)
- IBMS Certificate of Competence (for biomedical scientists)
- NHS Scientist Training Programme completion (for clinical scientists)
- Specialist portfolio in relevant discipline (haematology, microbiology, genetics, etc.)

## Employers Hiring

- Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (5 jobs)

## Locations Hiring

- Cambridge, East of England (5 jobs)

## Location Context

Cambridge University Hospitals (Addenbrooke's) is a major teaching hospital with strong research links to the university. Royal Papworth Hospital, the UK's largest specialist cardiothoracic hospital, relocated to the Cambridge Biomedical Campus in 2019.

## Relevant NHS Employers

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust

Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

## FAQs

### What jobs are available in NHS health science services?

NHS health science services includes biomedical scientists, clinical scientists, medical laboratory assistants, healthcare scientists, medical physicists, and laboratory managers across specialties like haematology, microbiology, and genetics.

### What qualifications do I need for NHS laboratory roles?

Laboratory roles require relevant science degrees. Biomedical scientists need HCPC registration and IBMS certification. Clinical scientists typically need postgraduate training via the NHS Scientist Training Programme.

### What is the salary range for NHS health science roles?

Under the 2026/27 pay scale, NHS health science salaries range from Band 4 (approximately £28,000-£31,000) for laboratory assistants to Band 8 (£58,000+) for consultant clinical scientists and heads of department.

### What career progression is available in NHS health sciences?

Health scientists can progress from Band 5-6 (newly qualified) to specialist, advanced, and consultant scientist roles. Management pathways include laboratory manager and head of service positions.

### What is the NHS Scientist Training Programme?

The STP is a three-year salaried postgraduate training programme (leading to a master's-level qualification) for graduates who want to become NHS clinical scientists. It is the main entry route for clinical scientist registration with HCPC. Competition is high, with several hundred applicants per specialism. Specialisms include clinical biochemistry, haematology, microbiology, genetics, medical physics, and bioinformatics. Applications are made through the National School of Healthcare Science.

### Do laboratory roles involve shift work?

Many hospital laboratories run extended hours, with some operating 24/7. Biomedical scientists and medical laboratory assistants commonly work a rota that includes evenings, weekends, and bank holidays, particularly in core specialties like haematology, biochemistry, and blood transfusion. The exact pattern depends on the laboratory and trust. Unsocial hours enhancements of 30-60% apply depending on the hours worked.

## Agent Notes

- This Markdown page is generated from the same Job Clerk SEO landing-page data as the HTML page.
- Use the canonical HTML URL for user-facing references.
- Live job counts change as source NHS adverts open and close.
