-
Clinical Pharmacology BSc is the only course of its kind in the UK, this hands-on course has been developed in consultation with businesses and industry leaders.
Clinical Pharmacology BSc (Hons) degree Course overview
Designed in collaboration with industry leaders, this course will prepare you for a range of careers.
If you’ve been looking at pharmacology courses, you’ll notice that they focus on the fundamental science and drug mechanisms.
Clinical pharmacology takes a deeper dive into how we develop drugs, the processes of clinical trials and the impact of drugs on the human body. Instead of completing modules one at a time, you’ll complete six side-by-side modules which look at the bigger picture of the use of drugs in healthcare.
You’ll ask questions like:
- How does the effect of a drug change with age?
- How do clinicians see different diseases?
- How can we be confident that vaccines work?
Prioritising hands-on experience
Unlike many other courses, you’ll do your research project in your second year. This might be a lab-based project or perhaps you’ll look at data from the wards. Past students have looked at everything from the effectiveness of a novel drug to relax bladders to antibiotic usage with different clinical teams at St. George's compared to other hospitals.
After you’ve finished this project, you’ll spend six weeks on a placement that exposes you to work practices and professional conduct. In your final year, you’ll continue to hone your research skills and complete a literature review. At the same time, you’ll look at hot topics in pharmacology, exploring the latest breakthroughs in areas like oncology and new treatments for viruses.
Finally, you’ll pick from three modules which will challenge you to study at a more advanced level.
Structure
Course content
The curriculum is based around seven themes. Your knowledge and skills in these topics will develop progressively through the course.
- Fundamentals of science: Understanding how the body works and what goes wrong in disease.
- Pharmacokinetics: How the body handles drugs.
- Pharmacodynamics: How drugs exert their effects on the body.
- Drug development and clinical trials: How drugs are discovered and developed as medicines.
- Drugs in healthcare: How information from clinical trials and drug development is used to guide the use of medicines for patients in clinical practice.
- Data and statistics: How to collect, manage, analyse, present and interpret research data relating to drugs.
- Skills portfolio: Developing clinical trials, laboratory, presentation and personal skills required to be successful in a work environment and demonstrate this to employers.
Year 1
In the first semester, you will be introduced to a broad spectrum of concepts across the seven themes. In the second semester, your focus turns to key drug targets, including inflammatory, infectious, cardiovascular and metabolic disease. You will look at each topic from the perspective of the different themes and accompany your theoretical learning with clinical and laboratory practicals, workshops and data analysis.
Throughout the course, you will be developing skills that will be imminently transferrable to future employment. In the first year, for example, developing both presentation and communication skills, you work in teams to prepare and make the case for a new drug. This includes pitching your ideas to a ‘Dragons’ Den’ style panel of judges, which has previously included St George’s Principal and industry representatives.
Year 2
In Semester 3 (the first semester of Year 2) you will continue your learning about key drug targets, focusing on neurological and psychiatric disease, cancer, reproduction, paediatrics and old age. You will develop your knowledge and skills around clinical trials design, data handling and pharmacokinetics. Weekly careers workshops help you find out about all the options open to you on completing the degree to help you select projects, placements and Year 3 modules.
Year 2 exams are at the end of Semester 3, so you can focus for the rest of the year on gaining practical experience. In the first half of semester 4, you will undertake a practical research project that will give you experience of clinical- or laboratory-based research. You will present the results of your study in a scientific symposium and write it up as a research paper. You will then spend six weeks gaining valuable work-related experience. This may be a group-based project working with some of the stakeholders associated with the University and hospital to complete a real-world project, extended time in a research lab, working in a company setting or placement in a European University. Companies that took students in previous years include Astra Zeneca, Niche Pharmaceuticals, Airfinity, Fortrea, Takeda, Richmond Pharmacology, Boyd Consultants and Eurofins. These placements will strengthen your teamwork, communication, and problem-solving abilities, developing the confidence and work-ready skills employers value most.
At the end of your second year, you can also choose to take a ‘professional year’, applying for a placement in industry to develop your experience and enhance your CV, capitalising on our excellent links across the sector.
Year 3
In the final year, you will look at latest advances and ‘hot topics’, including new therapeutic approaches to disease and cutting-edge drug developments, such as biological drugs, nanotechnology and gene therapy. You will use your career plans and experience to choose course modules to study to a more advanced level. Year 3 includes a written research project, where you get the chance to write a scientific review with support from a team of expert tutors.
Teaching and assessment
We share our site with one of the UK’s largest teaching hospitals giving you the chance to learn in a busy healthcare environment. Most of our teaching staff hold clinical roles or have previously worked as a healthcare professional, so you will learn from academics with real on-the-job experience.
Studying at a smaller, more specialist university means we’ll get to know you and help you reach your potential. You’ll be part of interactive group sessions and our academics are always on hand if you need extra support.
How our experts teach depends on the course content, but we recognise that our students have different learning styles. On this course, you can expect a diverse range of:
- Clinical placements
- Clinical skills sessions
- Computer-based sessions
- Guest lectures
- Group work
- Lab-based sessions
- Lectures
- Online learning
- Patient interaction
- Practical workshops
- Seminars
- Simulation
- Tutorials
Assessment
The way we assess your learning will change depending on the module but we use a variety of assessment methods so every student has a chance to show their knowledge and strengths. You can expect a mixture of:
- A clinical portfolio
- Case reviews
- Clinical practice assessments
- Essays
- Exams
- Oral presentations
- Poster presentations
- Reports
- Research projects
To prepare you for the practical challenges you’ll face, we design assessments that reflect real-world scenarios, such as case reviews and research projects.
Your assessments will be formative and summative. This means some won’t count towards your final grade and you’ll have the chance to improve based on our feedback.
Placement
All students will undertake six weeks of work experience with an employer during the second year of the course. This will give you the opportunity to find out more about what it takes to be successful in the workplace and what you might want to do after this degree.
In 2021 and 2022, employers who offered work experience to our students included:
- Pharmaceutical companies – Astra Zeneca, Roche, GSK, Takeda
- Contract research organisations – LabCorp, Niche Pharmaceuticals, Richmond Pharmacology
- Pharmacovigilance and regulatory affairs – Boyd Consultants
- Research companies – HelloBio, Airfinity, Eurofins clinical diagnostics.
In addition to the guaranteed six weeks’ work experience, you will have the optional opportunity to apply for an external professional year. The application process for a professional year is to individual companies who advertise their opportunities and is competitive. If successful, you would undertake the professional year between Years 2 and 3.
In 2021 and 2022 students were successful in gaining placement years with major companies including GlaxoSmithKline, Labcorp, Merck Sharp and Dohme and Sanofi.
The supervised, hands-on experience you get with both types of placements is an excellent way to consolidate your learning and makes you extremely attractive to employers on graduation. You will gain experience of working as part of a team, demonstrating professional behaviour. You will be supervised and mentored by experienced professionals and receive support from a University tutor.
Our course is unusual in offering all students work experience, as well as supporting the additional professional year in those who are interested.
Fees and funding
Fees for year 2027 / 28
Home/UK
£10,050
International
To be confirmed
Our undergraduate fees are set in line with the maximum permitted by the UK Government and may increase in subsequent years in line with government policy.
Funding options
Explore up-to-date information about funding options, available financial support and typical living costs.
- Fee waivers are available for this course.
- Means tested support is available for 2026/27 entry.
Additional expenses
Some of our degrees may involve additional expenses which are not covered by your tuition fees. Find out more about additional expenses.
Career
Clinical pharmacologists are needed now more than ever as we race to find new drugs and vaccines in the fight against new infections and diseases. Within the NHS, professionals in this area are critical to medicine management and supporting patients’ treatment.
Working in drug regulation, running clinical trials, researching disease processes – there are diverse opportunities in this area. Potential employers include the NHS and professional and regulatory organisations, such as the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
Our graduates secure roles within:
- Academia (teaching or research)
- Bioanalytical companies
- Biomedical companies
- Biotechnical companies
- Clinical trials units – industry or healthcare
- Contract research organisations
- Pharmaceutical companies
- Publications houses
- Regulatory affairs
Many students continue their learning with postgraduate programmes in areas such as neuroscience, global health, genetics, and medical statistics.
How to apply
Applications for degree courses must be made through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS).
This course is not yet open for 2027 entry applications. Information will be updated in due course.
You can apply through your school or college using the Apply system, which enables you to submit your application directly to the UCAS website.
- You can apply to up to five universities or institutions on the UCAS form. For this course, the UCAS course code is B210, and the institution code for City St George’s, University of London is C60.
- Call: 020 3897 2032
- Applications for entry in September 2027 should have arrived at UCAS by 13 January 2027. Applications that arrive after the UCAS deadline will be considered only at City St George’s discretion.
Please take care to enter the correct course code when applying, particularly for subjects with a Foundation year or with BEng (Hons) and MEng (Hons) or BSc (Hons) and MSci (Hons) options.
UCAS has implemented an ‘invisibility of choices’ policy so that, on the initial application and while you are receiving decisions, each institution can see only their entry and not those of other institutions you have chosen. This ensures that your application for a course at City St George’s is considered solely on your academic and personal qualities.
There is an application fee for some students when submitting their application form. Please see the UCAS website for more details.
For enquiries about the admissions process at City St George’s, please contact our Admissions Office.
Complete the Admissions enquiry form.
Call: +44 (0)20 7040 8716.
If your enquiry is about admission to a particular course, please use the contact details provided on the course page.
Recent Engagement in Education
Due to the demanding nature of the programme, it is important that applicants can demonstrate recent engagement in education.
If the qualifications that you are applying on the basis of (e.g. Level 3 or degree-level qualifications) were awarded more than five years ago (e.g. before summer 2022), it may still be possible for us to consider your application.
In this case, we would look at supplementary Level 3 qualifications, or relevant work experience, that you have undertaken within the last five years.
These applications will be considered on a case-by-case basis following submission of a UCAS application.
Application Checklist
You must provide:
- full details of your Level 2 (GCSE or equivalent) qualifications with grades
- full details of your Level 3 (A Level or equivalent) qualifications with achieved/predicted grades
- full details of your degree qualifications with achieved/predicted grades
- a personal statement (more information about this document is available on the UCAS website)
- an academic reference from your current or most recent institution with predicted grades
When to apply
Your application for entry in September 2026 should arrive at UCAS between September 2025 and the UCAS deadline in January 2026. Applications that arrive after the UCAS deadline will be considered only at City St George's discretion.
Contacting UCAS
Website: www.ucas.com
Address: Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS), Rosehill, New Barn Lane, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, GL52 3LZ
Telephone:
- from inside the UK 0871 468 0468
- from outside the UK +44 (0)871 468 0468
For callers with hearing difficulties:
- from inside the UK use the Text Relay service on 18001 0871 468 0468
- from outside the UK dial +44 151 494 1260 (text phone) and then ask the operator to dial 0871 468 0468.
For enquiries about the admissions process and entry requirements at City St George's, please contact our Course Enquiries Team.
Complete the Admissions enquiry form.
Call: +44 (0) 20 3897 2032
Our students
Gain further insights into our courses through our students.
Ask a student
Want to find out more about student life? Chat with our student ambassadors and ask any question you have
Academics
Your studies are supported by a team of committed and enthusiastic teachers and researchers, experts in their chosen field. On occasion we also work with external professionals to enhance your learning and appreciation of the wider subject.