

BSc Pharmaceutical Science
About this course
Pharmaceutical science sits at the heart of how new medicines are discovered, developed, and made safe and effective for patients. It is a discipline that brings together chemistry, biology, and pharmacology to understand how drug molecules interact with living systems, how new treatments are formulated and tested, and how the body absorbs, distributes, and metabolises medicines. For students with a strong interest in science and a desire to contribute to healthcare, pharmaceutical science offers a rigorous and practically oriented route into one of the world's largest and most consequential industries. At Anglia Ruskin University, this three-year programme is delivered in an industry-standard SuperLab facility in Chelmsford, giving you hands-on experience with equipment and techniques that reflect real working environments in research and pharmaceutical manufacturing. You will study the science of drug discovery and development, learning how compounds are identified, optimised, and tested through the stages that lead to a licensed medicine. Topics across the programme include medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, formulation science, quality control, and the regulatory frameworks that govern pharmaceutical development. You will develop strong laboratory skills alongside the analytical and problem-solving abilities that the sector values. The combination of theory and practical work throughout the programme means you develop both a scientific understanding of pharmaceutical processes and the competence to work in laboratory settings with confidence. These are qualities that employers in the pharmaceutical, biotech, and related sectors look for in graduate recruits. Graduates from pharmaceutical science degrees move into a broad range of roles. Many enter the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries in positions such as research scientist, analytical chemist, formulation scientist, quality assurance officer, or regulatory affairs specialist. Others work in NHS pharmacy, clinical research organisations, or government agencies that oversee drug regulation and safety. Teaching, science communication, and postgraduate study, including routes towards pharmacy qualification or research degrees in pharmaceutical science, drug discovery, or related fields, are also common paths.
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