
In Malaysia, there is no direct Bachelor of Midwifery programme offered to school leavers. Midwifery is strictly a post-registration nursing specialization, regulated by the Malaysian Nursing Board (MNB). This means students cannot become a midwife through a standalone bachelor’s degree the way they can in some countries such as the UK, Australia, or New Zealand.
Instead, the Malaysian route requires students to complete the following sequence:
After becoming a Registered Midwife through Post Basic training, a graduate may pursue Bachelor-level studies, but not as a direct entry. Nurses who specialise in midwifery may continue to obtain a Bachelor of Nursing (Honours) or a Bachelor in Nursing Science (Top-up/Upgrading) to enhance their academic qualification. These bachelor programmes include modules such as reproductive health, maternal-child nursing, community midwifery, and women’s health promotion, but they do not replace Post Basic Midwifery training.
The purpose of a Bachelor’s qualification for midwives is to elevate academic knowledge, allow progression into leadership roles, support eligibility for postgraduate nursing studies, and open opportunities in teaching, management, research, and community health programmes.
Therefore, while Malaysia does not provide a direct Bachelor of Midwifery, Registered Midwives can pursue bachelor’s degrees in nursing to advance professionally and academically.
| Mode | Duration |
|---|---|
| Full BSc Nursing | 4 years (if fresh student) |
| RN-to-BSc Nursing (Upgrading) | 2–3 years full/part-time |
| Institution Type | Estimated Total Fees |
|---|---|
| Public Universities | RM 12,000 – RM 40,000 |
| Private Universities | RM 30,000 – RM 80,000 |

