

BSc Pharmacology (with Foundation Year)
About this course
Pharmacology is the science of how drugs interact with living systems. It sits at the heart of medicine, asking how chemical compounds produce their effects in the body, how those effects can be harnessed therapeutically, and how unwanted or dangerous effects can be understood and minimised. The field draws on biochemistry, physiology, cell biology, and chemistry, and it underpins the development of virtually every medicine in clinical use. This four-year full-time programme at Nottingham Trent University includes a foundation year, providing an additional preparatory stage that builds the scientific knowledge and academic skills needed for the main degree. The foundation year is particularly valuable for students who have strong scientific interest but whose prior qualifications may not fully meet the standard entry requirements, making the full programme accessible to a broader range of motivated learners. With a typical tariff of 88 points, the programme is designed for students who show genuine curiosity and commitment rather than the very highest prior attainment. Over the four years you will progress from foundational science into detailed study of how drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolised, and excreted, and how they produce their effects at the cellular and molecular level. You will develop laboratory skills alongside theoretical understanding, learning to work with data, conduct experimental procedures, and interpret results critically. Pharmacology requires rigorous scientific reasoning combined with an awareness of clinical and ethical context, and the degree develops both. Understanding how regulatory frameworks govern the development and approval of new medicines is also an important part of the picture. Graduates from pharmacology programmes move into careers across the pharmaceutical and biomedical industries, in research and development, clinical trials, regulatory affairs, medical communications, and quality assurance. Routes into clinical pharmacy, medicine, or dentistry with further study are also open. Others move into public health, government advisory roles, science writing, or laboratory-based careers in academic research. The combination of scientific rigour and applied medical knowledge makes pharmacology graduates versatile across the life sciences sector.
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