

MBiol Pharmacology (4 Years)
About this course
Pharmacology is the scientific discipline that investigates how drugs and other chemical substances interact with living systems, exploring the mechanisms by which medicines produce their therapeutic effects and their unwanted side effects. It sits at the crossroads of chemistry, physiology, and biochemistry, using the knowledge of molecular biology and cell biology to understand how drugs act on the targets within the body that determine health and disease. This understanding is fundamental to the discovery, development, and safe use of medicines, making pharmacology a central science for the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries and for clinical practice. At the University of Liverpool, this four-year programme incorporates a year abroad at a partner institution, giving you an international dimension to your scientific education and the experience of studying pharmacology in a different research environment. During your years at Liverpool, you will build a thorough grounding in the core areas of the discipline: the mechanisms of drug action, the pharmacokinetics that describe how drugs are absorbed and eliminated by the body, neuropharmacology, cardiovascular pharmacology, and the biology of inflammation and pain. Laboratory work is central to the degree, and you will develop the experimental and analytical skills that pharmacological research demands. Liverpool's pharmacology provision is research-active, and the degree benefits from faculty who work at the frontier of the discipline. Pharmacology graduates are in demand across the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, where knowledge of drug mechanisms is directly applicable in research and development, regulatory affairs, and medical science liaison roles. Clinical research organisations that support drug trials and healthcare companies providing diagnostic or therapeutic products also hire pharmacology graduates. Some graduates move into the NHS in roles that require drug knowledge, including pharmacy technician support or roles in clinical pharmacology departments. Teaching and science communication are further options. Many graduates continue to postgraduate research, developing deep expertise in a particular pharmacological area and positioning themselves for research careers in academia or the pharmaceutical industry.
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