

BSc Pharmacology
About this course
Pharmacology is the scientific study of how drugs and chemicals interact with living systems, examining the mechanisms by which substances affect the functioning of the body at molecular, cellular, and systemic levels. It encompasses not only conventional medicines but the full range of chemicals, from natural products and toxins through to synthetic compounds developed by the pharmaceutical industry, that produce biological effects. Understanding pharmacology is fundamental to medicine and healthcare, since every clinical decision involving drug treatment depends on knowledge of how drugs work, how the body processes them, and what determines their efficacy and toxicity. At Bristol, this three-year degree explores pharmacology in the widest possible sense, examining the types of chemicals that affect bodily function and the mechanisms through which they act. You will study receptor pharmacology, neuropharmacology, cardiovascular pharmacology, endocrine pharmacology, and the pharmacology of inflammatory and immune responses, alongside the principles of drug discovery, development, and regulation. Laboratory work is central to the degree, developing your practical experimental skills and your ability to design, conduct, and interpret pharmacological studies. Bristol's research strength in pharmacology and neuroscience means that you are working in an environment where significant discoveries are being made, and the degree draws directly on that research culture in its teaching. Pharmacology graduates are in demand across the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, in roles including drug discovery research, pharmacovigilance, regulatory affairs, and clinical research. Academic and industrial research careers are both accessible to graduates with strong laboratory training. Many pharmacology graduates also pursue postgraduate study in pharmacology, neuroscience, drug development, or toxicology, progressing to doctoral research that can lead to senior scientific roles. Others use the biological and chemical understanding developed in the degree as preparation for medicine, dentistry, or other health professional training routes.
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