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Registered Nurse

Assess, plan, and deliver clinical care to patients across hospitals and community settings — one of the most in-demand and versatile roles in UK healthcare.

Canonical page: /careers/registered-nurse
Physical demand

High

People contact

Very high

Time to entry

3 years full-time degree; 4 years via nursing degree apprenticeship; accelerated 2-year programmes available for graduates

What you do

Registered nurses assess patients, plan and deliver care, administer medicines, and coordinate treatment across multidisciplinary teams. You might work on a general medical ward, in A&E, in a surgical recovery unit, or in community clinics. Day-to-day tasks include carrying out clinical observations, managing IV lines and wound care, supporting patients and families through difficult diagnoses, and escalating deteriorating patients. Nursing offers exceptional career breadth: you can specialise in areas such as intensive care, oncology, paediatrics, diabetes, or tissue viability, or move into advanced clinical practice, research, education, or management. Registered nurses hold NMC registration and work to a professional code of conduct.

Why this career is resilient

The NHS faces a structural nursing shortage — over 40,000 registered nurse vacancies persist across England alone, with similar pressures in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Nursing requires hands-on clinical assessment, complex decision-making in unpredictable situations, and deeply human therapeutic relationships that AI cannot replicate. Technology is changing parts of the role — electronic records, remote monitoring, and clinical decision support tools are increasingly common — but these augment rather than replace nurses. NMC regulation, mandatory revalidation, and degree-level entry create strong professional barriers that protect the role from commoditisation.


Routes in

Access to Higher Education

A one-year full-time (or two-year part-time) qualification designed for adults who did not take A levels. Recognised by universities and many nursing/allied health programmes.

Duration: 1 year full-time, 2 years part-time

Full-time college course

Study full-time at a further education college, usually for 1–2 years. You will need to fund yourself or apply for a student loan (available for Level 4+ courses).

Duration: 1–2 years

Employer-funded training

Some employers — particularly the NHS, emergency services, and larger care providers — run their own funded training programmes. You apply for a job and train as you work.

Duration: Varies

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