

BSc Pharmacology
About this course
Pharmacology is the science of drugs: how they act on biological systems, how the body handles them, and how they can be developed and used to treat disease. It sits at the intersection of biochemistry, physiology, and medicine, asking fundamental questions about the molecular mechanisms through which chemical compounds produce their effects, whether therapeutic or toxic. The discipline underpins the pharmaceutical industry, clinical medicine, and the regulatory frameworks that govern drug development and safety. At Newcastle University, this three-year full-time programme includes a sandwich year with work placement, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities embedded throughout, making it one of the most practically oriented pharmacology degrees in the UK. The sandwich year gives you the opportunity to spend an extended period working within a pharmaceutical company, research institution, or clinical environment, seeing how pharmacological knowledge is applied in practice and building the professional experience that graduate employers value. The year abroad adds an international dimension, giving you the chance to study pharmacology in a different academic tradition and to develop the independence that working and learning across cultures requires. Throughout the academic parts of the programme, you will develop a thorough grounding in how drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolised, and excreted, as well as the cellular and molecular mechanisms through which they produce their pharmacological effects. You will learn about drug discovery and development, clinical pharmacology, and the safety testing and regulatory processes that drugs must pass before they reach patients. Newcastle has strong research activity in pharmacology and close connections with the pharmaceutical and biomedical research sectors. Graduates work in pharmaceutical companies, contract research organisations, hospital pharmacy, clinical trials management, regulatory affairs, toxicology, and public health. The sandwich year often leads directly to graduate employment with the placement provider, and the combination of academic rigour and practical experience makes pharmacology graduates attractive to a wide range of employers. Postgraduate study, including PhD research and masters programmes, is a natural route for those interested in research careers.
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