Pharmacology
Popular career routes for graduates with a pharmacology degree include research, drug development, patenting and teaching
Job options
Jobs directly related to your degree include:
- Academic researcher
- Analytical chemist
- Clinical research associate
- Clinical scientist, biochemistry
- Clinical scientist, immunology
- Higher education lecturer
- Medical science liaison
- Pharmacologist
- Research scientist (life sciences)
- Research scientist (medical)
- Toxicologist
Jobs where your degree would be useful include:
- Biomedical scientist
- Community pharmacist
- Medical sales representative
- Neuroscientist
- Patent attorney
- Policy officer
- Regulatory affairs officer
- Science writer
- Scientific laboratory technician
- Secondary school teacher
Remember that many employers accept applications from graduates with any degree subject, so don't restrict your thinking to the jobs listed here.
Work experience
Getting relevant work experience helps you develop a network of useful contacts and demonstrates your interest and commitment to working in pharmacology. Build up your experience as a laboratory assistant or through work shadowing in your area of interest.
Organisations such as the British Pharmacological Society (BPS) offer a small number of vacation studentships to financially support undergraduate students undertaking a pharmacology summer vacation research project.
The BPS also advertises relevant external internships and placements on its website. If you're interested in a pharmacology-related career, you could become an undergraduate member of the BPS. You will get access to its journals and e-learning and can join an online community to build your network.
Some pharmacology degrees offer a placement year and you may be able to find a placement in an industrial, commercial or research environment. Search the websites of pharmaceutical companies for details of sandwich placements.
Search for placements and find out more about work experience and internships.
Typical employers
A pharmacology degree offers prospects for research careers in academia, industry, the scientific civil service and hospitals, working in drug regulation, policy development and public health research.
You can also work in the product management side of the industry or in areas such as marketing and medical information, acting as the link between pharmaceutical companies and doctors and patients.
Key areas to use your expertise in pharmacology, include:
- clinical trials
- toxicology
- scientific writing
- regulatory affairs
- patenting
- manufacturing
- finance
- IT
- sales and marketing.
Common employers of pharmacology graduates include:
- Civil Service
- Department of Health and Social Care
- Intellectual Property Office (IPO)
- National Health Service (NHS)
- pharmaceutical and biotech companies
- universities and research institutions.
Find information on employers in healthcare, science and pharmaceuticals, engineering and manufacturing, and other job sectors.
Skills for your CV
Studying a pharmacology degree gives you an understanding of medications, their sources, chemical properties, biological effects and therapeutic uses. You explore drug interactions in biological systems, the formulation and operation of clinical trials, drug regulation and the marketing of pharmaceuticals.
You also develop a set of valuable transferable skills during your degree, including:
- research skills
- oral and written communication skills
- the ability to design, retrieve, handle and interpret complex data
- critical analytical and problem-solving abilities
- good organisational skills
- the ability to work without supervision and use your own initiative
- decision-making skills
- independent thinking
- attention to detail
- observation
- time management
- teamwork.
Further study
Further study is usually in the form of a Masters or research PhD, in which you develop advanced skills relating to complex scientific problems and enhance your ability in technical research, laboratory work and communication.
Common areas of further study include:
- biochemistry
- clinical pharmacology
- endocrinology
- molecular biology
- neuroscience
- nutrition
- toxicology.
You can also use your BSc in pharmacology in application to medical schools that offer graduate-entry courses in medicine, dentistry and veterinary medicine.
With further study or training you could enter other career areas such as teaching, marketing, journalism or publishing. Research the area and check the job profiles to find out how what the entry requirements are.
For more information on further study and to find a course that interests you, see Masters degrees and search postgraduate courses in pharmacology.
What do pharmacology graduates do?
The top ten roles held by pharmacology graduates include laboratory technicians (7%), biological scientists (6%), pharmacists (4%), biochemists and biomedical scientists (3%), business associate professionals (3%), nursing auxiliaries and assistants (3%), chemical scientists (3%), quality assurance and regulatory professionals (2%) and quality control and planning engineers (2%).
Destination | Percentage |
---|---|
Employed | 52.9 |
Further study | 19.1 |
Working and studying | 12 |
Unemployed | 7.3 |
Other | 8.6 |
Type of work | Percentage |
---|---|
Science | 20.1 |
Retail, catering and customer service | 9.6 |
Business, HR and finance | 9.3 |
Clerical, secretarial and administrative | 7.8 |
Other | 53.2 |
Find out what other graduates are doing after finishing their degrees in What do graduates do?
Graduate Outcomes survey data from HESA.