

BSc Pharmacology
About this course
Pharmacology is the science of drug action: how chemical substances interact with biological targets, how those interactions produce their therapeutic or toxic effects, and how the body processes drugs through absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. The discipline is the scientific foundation of the pharmaceutical industry and essential to rational drug prescribing, and it draws together biochemistry, physiology, cell biology, and chemistry to provide a molecular understanding of how medicines work. At the University of Edinburgh, this four-year, full-time programme follows the Scottish honours structure, and it includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study pharmacology in an international setting. Edinburgh has a distinguished research tradition in pharmacological sciences, and the programme reflects that depth, particularly in areas such as neuropharmacology, cardiovascular pharmacology, and drug discovery. You will develop a rigorous understanding of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics, receptor theory, signalling mechanisms, and the pharmacology of major therapeutic drug classes, alongside strong practical skills in laboratory techniques including cell culture, fluorescence microscopy, electrophysiology, and drug assays. The four-year Scottish honours structure gives you a broader first year before increasing specialisation in later years, and the year abroad adds international scientific perspective to your training. Edinburgh's urban environment, with its medical research institutes and pharmaceutical industry connections, provides a rich professional context for the degree. Graduates from Edinburgh's pharmacology programme work in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, in academic research, in clinical pharmacology within the NHS, in regulatory affairs, and in medical communications and science writing. Many go on to postgraduate study, including PhD research in pharmacology, toxicology, or related biomedical sciences. Edinburgh's reputation makes graduates competitive for the most selective research positions and industry roles.
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