Biomedical Scientist

Great Yarmouth
3 days ago
Create job alert

About Us

Pure Healthcare are the UK’s leading healthcare recruitment agency, committed to delivering service excellence. We have many years of framework healthcare recruitment experience. We have built up a wide network of contacts, clients and resources within our business to support clinicians throughout their professional career whilst also supporting healthcare organisations with their gaps in service to ensure patient care and quality. Our specialist consultants are dedicated to finding you the perfect role.

The Role:

Pure Healthcare Group are currently seeking an experienced Biomedical Scientist to work in a Haematology and blood transfusion department with our clients in Great Yarmouth.  

Job Ref: PHG05171

Job Title: Biomedical Scientist

Department: Haematology and Blood Transfusion

Pay Rate: £27/hr  

Start Date: Asap

Contract: Ongoing

Hours: 24/7 rota hours

Location: Great Yarmouth

To be considered for the role you must have the following:

Valid Right to Work Documentation

NHS Experience
Benefits include:

Fast, automated compliance process
Designated specialist consultant
24/7 support – we’re here whenever you need us!
Lucrative career opportunities across the UK
Enhanced pay rates
CV advice
Career advice
Accommodation and travel assistance
Smooth and reliable payroll options
Know someone who would be a great fit?
Refer a friend or colleague and earn a £250 referral bonus upon their successful placement! (T&Cs apply)

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Biomedical Scientist

Biomedical Scientist

Biomedical scientist

Biomedical Scientist

Biomedical Scientist

Biomedical Scientist - Microbiology

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Biotechnology Job Applications (UK Guide)

Hiring managers in biotechnology do not start by reading your CV word for word. They scan for credibility, relevance and risk. In a regulated, evidence-driven sector like biotech, the first question is simple: is this person safe, competent and genuinely capable of contributing in this environment? Whether you are applying for roles in research, manufacturing, quality, regulatory, clinical, bioinformatics or commercial biotech, the strongest applications make the right signals obvious in the first 10–20 seconds. This in-depth guide explains exactly what hiring managers in UK biotechnology look for first, how they assess CVs, cover letters and portfolios, and why capable candidates are often rejected. Use it as a practical checklist before you apply.

The Skills Gap in Biotechnology Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Biotechnology sits at the intersection of science, innovation and real-world impact. From life-saving medicines and diagnostics to sustainable agriculture, industrial bioprocessing and personalised healthcare, biotech plays a critical role in the UK economy. Yet despite strong graduate numbers and world-class universities, employers across the biotechnology sector continue to report a growing skills gap. Vacancies remain unfilled. Graduates struggle to secure their first roles. Hiring managers cite a lack of job-ready candidates. The issue is not intelligence or academic ability. It is preparation. Universities are producing scientifically knowledgeable graduates who are often not ready for modern biotechnology jobs. This article explores the biotechnology skills gap in depth: what universities teach well, what is missing from many degrees, why the gap exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build sustainable careers in biotech.

Biotechnology Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

Biotechnology is often portrayed as a young person’s game. White lab coats, fresh PhDs & long academic pipelines dominate the image. In reality, the UK biotechnology sector relies heavily on career switchers, mid-career professionals & people bringing experience from outside science. If you are in your 30s, 40s or 50s & thinking about moving into biotechnology, this article gives you a clear-eyed, UK-specific reality check. No hype. No Americanised career myths. Just an honest look at which biotech jobs are realistic, what retraining actually involves & how employers really think about age & background.