Biomedical Engineer

 

Career Description

Biomedical engineers apply engineering techniques to solve biological and medical problems. They may design patient care equipment, such as dialysis machines and cardiac pacemakers, or develop equipment to measure various body functions. Biomedical engineering includes specialty fields such as bioinstrumentation, biomaterials, biomechanics, cellular biomedical engineering, tissue and genetic engineering, clinical engineering, medical imaging, orthopedic bioengineering, rehabilitation engineering and systems physiology.

Academic Requirements

Most biomedical engineers begin their training in a college-level engineering program. These programs are offered by colleges and universities nationwide and usually last five years. Although it is not always required for employment, students may wish to enroll in a master’s or doctorate program after receiving a
degree in biomedical engineering. Others simply may join the workforce and gain valuable hands-on experience in the field.

Schools

Saint Louis University
800/SLU-FORU

Washington University
314/935-6164

Professional Associations

National
American Society for Healthcare Engineering
Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation
Biomedical Engineering Society
The Biomedical Engineering Network

State
Gateway Biomedical Society

Additional Information

Learn More About Technical Instrumentation