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Laboratory Medicine, Bachelor (Hons)

RMIT University, Australia

 
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Subject ranking

Overall
Australia / QS 2025
10th
Overall
Australia / THE 2025
16th
Overall
Australia / ARWU 2024
18th

Costs

Course feesS$34.5K / year
Entertainment, books
food & rent
S$27K / year
Beer S$10
MacDonalds S$12
Cinema S$18
Coffee S$4
TotalS$61.5K / year

Entry requirements

A Level EEE
Diploma 1.6
International Baccalaureate 25

Information

Course
Code
110987C
Upcoming
Intakes
Feb 2026
Jul 2025
Course
Website (External)
Pathway
Programmes
See pathways
University
Information
WHATSAPP
+65 9650 3225
HOTLINE
+65 6333 1300

Duration

4 years
Graduate
2029
About the course

RMIT's Bachelor of Laboratory Medicine (Honours) will equip you with fundamental knowledge of human anatomy and physiology, develop your communication and professional skills and introduce you to factors that impact the health of individuals and communities, particularly our First Nations peoples.  You'll build skills and knowledge of molecular diagnostics which will provide an overview of the detection and application of biochemical and molecular biology techniques (DNA or RNA) to provide clinical information in the study of human diseases, including infectious disease, inherited conditions and cancer.  You'll also learn about clinical immunology and pathology, gaining an understanding of the diagnosis and management of patients with diseases or disease processes that result from disturbed immunological or pathophysiological mechanisms. As a graduate of this laboratory medicine degree, you'll be qualified to practise as a medical scientist in the diagnostic pathology industry, be competitive for employment in medical research and be competitive for entry into PhD studies.

What is laboratory medicine?

Laboratory medicine is the science of pathology — detecting and diagnosing disease. It involves analysing samples and conducting tests using body tissues (e.g. biopsies) and fluids (e.g. blood) to diagnose diseases, enable treatment of patients and provide information about future prevention. It's estimated that up to 70% of clinical decisions made by doctors are based on results and information provided by medical laboratory scientists.

A local representative of RMIT University in Singapore is available online to assist you with enquiries about this course.