

MPharm Pharmacy
About this course
Pharmacy is the science and practice of ensuring the safe, effective, and appropriate use of medicines. It sits at the junction of chemistry, biology, physiology, and clinical care, requiring pharmacists to understand how drugs are designed and manufactured, how they act on the body, how they interact with each other, and how they should be dispensed, monitored, and explained to patients. Pharmacists are the most accessible healthcare professionals in the NHS, and their role has expanded considerably beyond dispensing to include medicines review, clinical consultation, prescribing, and public health advice. At Bradford, this four-year degree provides the scientific and clinical foundations needed to register with the General Pharmaceutical Council as a pharmacist. You will study pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, physiology, microbiology, and the social and behavioural aspects of health and healthcare alongside the clinical pharmacy skills needed to practise. Bradford's approach to teaching is interactive and varied, moving beyond lectures to include laboratory work, simulated dispensing, case-based learning, and patient interaction, reflecting the active and patient-focused nature of pharmacy practice. You will complete supervised practice placements in community and hospital settings throughout the degree, developing the professional competence and communication skills that pharmacy requires. Pharmacy graduates register with the General Pharmaceutical Council and work in community pharmacies, hospital pharmacy departments, primary care, industry, academia, and regulatory bodies. Community pharmacy offers the most direct patient contact, with pharmacists increasingly taking on clinical roles including vaccination, health screening, and minor illness consultation. Hospital pharmacy involves complex medication management in acute settings. The pharmaceutical industry recruits pharmacy graduates into research and development, quality assurance, medical affairs, and regulatory roles. Postgraduate study and specialist training are available for pharmacists who wish to develop expertise in clinical pharmacy, prescribing, or pharmaceutical research.
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