Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Pharmacology

Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Pharmacology

Course Title

Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Pharmacology

MQF Level

6

Duration and Credits

3 Years

180 ECTS

Mode of Study

Full-time

Information for International applicants

  1. a pass at Advanced Level at grade C or better in Biology, and
  2. passes at Intermediate Matriculation Level in Chemistry and in one of the following subjects: Computing, Physics, Information Technology, Pure Mathematics or Applied Mathematics.

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Applications for our February and October intakes have been officially open since the third week in November. You can submit your application online. The deadlines for submission of applications vary according to the intake and courses. We encourage all international applicants to submit their applications as soon as possible. This is especially important if you require a visa to travel and eventually stay in Malta.

You can compare your national qualifications to the local requirements by visiting our qualifications comparability webpage. Access more information about our admission process and English language requirements.

The University of Malta has student accommodation on campus called Campus Hub. Campus Hub is just a 2-minute walk from the main campus. For more information, visit the accommodation website.

Our dedicated team at the student recruitment office is here to support you every step of the way. From the moment you start your application to the moment when you receive your decision letter, we're here to assist you. If you have any questions or need further information, don't hesitate to reach out to us. You can contact us at info@um.edu.mt, and our team will be more than happy to help.

After you receive an offer from us, our International Office will assist you with visas, accommodation and other related issues.

Pharmacology is the study of all aspects of medicines, including how they are developed, analysed, tested for their safety and effectiveness, administered, their beneficial and adverse effects, together with all aspects concerning their research. The degree course brings together the biological, biotechnological and digital aspects of pharmacology, and equips you with the required skills as recommended by both International Pharmacology associations and major European Universities, whilst keeping in focus the needs of the local and international industry.

Year 1 provides a solid basis of the required physiology, molecular biology, genetics and statistics, which is required to benefit from the rest of the course. It also lays the foundations for pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, drug formulations, drug development, regulatory issues, routes of drug administration, molecular pharmacology, pharmacotherapeutics, pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics.

Year 2 delivers a sound knowledge of all the major drugs and drug classes, their modes of action and their application in the respective therapeutic fields. This year also provides students with practical laboratory bench teaching and training in various skills of molecular pharmacology research, such as cell culturing, drug assays, cellular transfection etc.

Year 3 introduces pharmacotoxicology and toxicogenomic aspects, as well as the innovative fields of digital therapeutics and of computational drug design. Students will prepare their dissertation during this year, further contributing to the acquisition of a skill set which is transferable to the employment sector.

Pharmacology is the study of all aspects of medicines, including how they are developed, analysed, tested for their safety and effectiveness, administered, their beneficial and adverse effects, together with all aspects concerning their research. The degree course brings together the biological, biotechnological and digital aspects of pharmacology, and equips you with the required skills as recommended by both International Pharmacology associations and major European Universities, whilst keeping in focus the needs of the local and international industry.

The curriculum is structured as follows:

  • Year 1 provides a solid basis of the required physiology, molecular biology, genetics and statistics, which is required to benefit from the rest of the course. It also lays the foundations for pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, drug formulations, drug development, regulatory issues, routes of drug administration, molecular pharmacology, pharmacotherapeutics, pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics.
  • Year 2 delivers a sound knowledge of all the major drugs and drug classes, their modes of action and their application in the respective therapeutic fields. This year also provides students with practical laboratory bench teaching and training in various skills of molecular pharmacology research, such as cell culturing, drug assays, cellular transfection etc.
  • Year 3 introduces Pharmacotoxicology and toxicogenomic aspects, as well as the innovative fields of digital therapeutics and of computational drug design. You will prepare your dissertation during this year, further contributing to the acquisition of a skill set which is transferable to the employment sector.

Communication and Academic Skills Programme

The communication and academic skills programme complements students’ main course of study. It introduces them to writing and presenting as situated within academic contexts sensitive to specific disciplines and develops their competences for future careers.

 
Year   (This/these unit/s start/s in Semester 1 and continue/s in Semester 2)
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH1909 Pharmacology Seminars 1 4 ECTS    
PHB1500 Human Physiology 6 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 1
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH1901 Drug Receptor Theory 4 ECTS    
CPH1902 Overview of Drug Classes and Function 4 ECTS    
CPH1903 Drug Discovery, Development, Regulatory Aspects, Pharmacovigilance 4 ECTS    
CPH1905 Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics 1 4 ECTS    
LIN1063 Academic Reading and Writing in English 2 ECTS    
PHB1503 Molecules of Life 6 ECTS    
SOR0210 Data Treatment and Probability 2 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 2
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH1904 Drug Formulations and Routes of Administration 4 ECTS    
CPH1906 Research Tools and Study Design in Molecular Pharmacology 4 ECTS    
CPH1907 Pharmacogenetics and Pharmacogenomics 4 ECTS    
CPH1908 Principles of Pharmacotherapeutics 4 ECTS    
MDS1026 Molecular Biology and Genetics 6 ECTS    
SOR0220 Elementary Statistical Theory 2 ECTS    

 
Requirement for regular progression to Year II: 60 credits

 
Year   (This/these unit/s start/s in Semester 1 and continue/s in Semester 2)
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH2909 Practical Research Training 4 ECTS    
CPH3011 Drugs used in Disorders of the Endocrine and Reproductive Systems and Cancer: Applications of Molecular Pharmacology 4 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 1
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH2901 Approaches to Analysis of Drugs and Metabolites 4 ECTS    
CPH2902 Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics 2 4 ECTS    
CPH2903 Antibiotics, Antifungals, Antivirals and Antihelminthics 4 ECTS    
CPH2904 Biological Drugs, Vaccines, Gene Therapy and Pharmacological Biotechnology 4 ECTS    
CPH2910 Pharmacology Seminars 2 4 ECTS    
CPH3010 Drugs used in Asthma, COPD and Epilepsy: Applications of Pharmacokinetics 4 ECTS    
PAT2121 Pathology 4 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 2
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH2011 Drugs used in Disorders of the Nervous and Cardiovascular Systems 4 ECTS    
CPH2905 Drugs used in Pain, Inflammation, Fever, Rheumatology and Nephrology 4 ECTS    
CPH2906 Drugs used in Ophthalmology, Blood Disorders, Bone Disorders, Vitamins and the use of Hyperbaric Oxygen 4 ECTS    
CPH2907 Societal impact of Pharmacology and Rational Drug Use 4 ECTS    
CPH2908 Research Approaches in Clinical Pharmacology and Medicine Use 4 ECTS    
CPH2911 Pharmacology Placements 4 ECTS    

 
Requirement for regular progression to Year III: 60 credits

 
Year   (This/these unit/s start/s in Semester 1 and continue/s in Semester 2)
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH3910 Research Project 16 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 1
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH3901 Pharmacotoxicology, Toxicogenomics, Drugs of Abuse 6 ECTS    
CPH3902 Digital Therapeutics 4 ECTS    
CPH3903 Accessing, Evaluating and Reporting Scientific Data in Pharmacology and Toxicology 4 ECTS    
CPH3904 Pharmacology Seminars 3 4 ECTS    
MMB3001 Theoretical Backgrounds to Biomedical Research 4 ECTS    
MMB3003 Methods of Biomedical Analysis 8 ECTS    

 
 
Semester 2
 
Compulsory Units (All students must register for this/these unit/s)
 
CPH3905 In Vitro and in Vivo Models and Translational Research in Pharmacology and Toxicology 4 ECTS    
MMB3002 Introduction to Bioinformatics 4 ECTS    
PHB2504 Molecular Recognition and Computational Drug Design 6 ECTS    

 
Requirement for successful completion of Year III: 60 credits
Requirement for successful completion of Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Pharmacology: 180 credits.

This programme of study is governed by the General Regulations for University Undergraduate Awards, 2019 and by the Bye-Laws for the award of Bachelor of Science (Honours) Pharmacology - B.Sc. (Hons) - under the auspices of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery.

As a successful graduate by the end of the course, you will show subject knowledge and understanding in your ability to (to name a few):

  • Explain the various mechanisms of drug actions at a molecular level.
  • Discuss the various pharmacological drug classes with their clinical applications, and modes of action.
  • Describe and evaluate the relevance of different routes of drug administration, within the context of different medicine formulations and patient-specific factors.
  • Describe the principles of drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, in terms of their theoretical aspects and practical applications.
  • Explain the various actions of biotherapeutic pharmacological agents (e.g. antibodies, vaccines), their use, and how these drugs differ from conventional small molecular therapeutic compounds from manufacturing, structural and mechanistic aspects.
  • Recognise and integrate the several factors that influence the benefit to risk ratio in drug use, keeping in perspective major issues such as therapeutic efficacy, adverse drug reactions, drug-drug and drug-food interactions, mode of drug administration and pharmacoeconomic aspects.

"

  1. Subject knowledge and understanding
    • Explain the various mechanisms of drug actions at a molecular level.
    • Discuss the various pharmacological drug classes with their clinical applications, and modes of action.
    • Describe and evaluate the relevance of different routes of drug administration, within the context of different medicine formulations and patient-specific factors.
    • Describe the principles of drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, in terms of their theoretical aspects and practical applications.
    • Explain the various actions of biotherapeutic pharmacological agents (e.g. antibodies, vaccines), their use, and how these drugs differ from conventional small molecular therapeutic compounds from manufacturing, structural and mechanistic aspects.
    • Describe the various existing approaches to gene therapy, their benefits and risks, and the current status of this technological approach in view of the outcomes of clinical trials carried out to date.
    • Recognise and integrate the several factors that influence the benefit to risk ratio in drug use, keeping in perspective major issues such as therapeutic efficacy, adverse drug reactions, drug-drug and drug-food interactions, mode of drug administration and pharmacoeconomic aspects.
    • Illustrate the various stages in drug development.
    • Discuss the approaches to digital therapeutics, and their integration within current evidence-based therapeutic guidelines.
    • Assimilate the importance of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenetics and apply this to practical situations in clinical therapeutics.
    • Obtain a theoretical and lab bench-based practical training of major research experimental pharmacological approaches, including in vitro and in vivo pharmacological models and techniques.
    • Discuss various experimental analysis approaches to clinical and molecular pharmacology aspects, such as clinical therapeutic drug monitoring, laboratory cell-based pharmacology end-point measurements etc.
    • Identify suitable bioinformatics and computational approaches to relevant pharmacology areas.
    • Recognise and apply proper ethical standards to clinical and animal-based research.
    • Comprehend the regulatory framework within which medicines are, to actual situations in a work environment.
    • Disseminate scientific knowledge and research through oral conference-type presentations and seminars, as well as posters.
    • Provide properly sourced and relevant drug and poisons information to medical, scientific and lay people.
    • Discuss aspects in Pharmacotoxicology, within a molecular and clinical framework, incorporating areas which include predictive toxicogenomic principles, intentional and accidental drug toxicity, drug identification in Pharmacotoxicology, use of antidotes etc.
  2. Intellectual development:
    • Integrate different pharmacological aspects of drugs in order to provide well-informed drug-related advice in their work environments.
    • Critically discuss issues related to several facets of drug use, and use learned knowledge as a stepping stone to expand their understanding on new drugs as they reach the market.
    • Apply different research models and research experiments to address a pharmacology question.
    • Discriminate reviewed and reliable scientific information sources from predatory journals and miscellaneous information providers.
    • Keep abreast with new developments in the field.
    • Recognise and apply proper ethical standards to clinical and animal-based research.
    • Apply the training obtained in medicines regulations, to actual situations in a work environment.
  3. Key/Transferable skills
    • Successfully and competently position yourself to provide advice related to pharmacology within a variety of work environments.
    • Be able to assess benefits and risks.
    • Apply basic statistical analysis skills to research applications and other work environments.
    • Apply and adapt the learned laboratory skills and research approaches to different work environments.
    • Apply pharmacological knowledge and skills to problem-solving approaches in therapeutics.
    • Source and evaluate relevant information from official repositories in order to address real-life situations, compile scientific reports etc.
    • Work independently and also within a multidisciplinary team.
    • Communicate effectively to scientific and non-scientific audiences.
    • Use task and time management skills.
  4. Other skills relevant to employability and personal development
    • Advise on drug development, regulatory issues, research activities, quality control etc, and apply these within a broader context extending for example to industrial chemicals, toxicological aspects, chemical safety, etc.
    • Apply ethical principles to drug research and other related activities.
    • Use the equipment in a laboratory effectively.
    • Communicate effectively, verbally and in writing, on issues related to pharmacology and related scientific areas.
    • Advise on cost-effective pharmacological management
    • Participate in pharmacovigilance activities and adverse drug reaction reporting
    • Interact effectively in a team as well as build international contacts.
    • Self-assess their performance and partake in continual professional development.
    • Productively engage in drug-related knowledge and healthcare activities.
    • Assume managerial roles within the health sciences sector.

Non EU Applicants:

Fee per academic year: Eur 10,800

You are viewing the fees for non EU nationals. Switch to EU nationals if you are a national of any country from within the EU/EEA.

As a graduate, the course will have provided you with the necessary skills and expertise to contribute to high level scientific research and academic publications. It will also provide the necessary skill-base to contribute to several commercial sectors, including the pharmaceutical manufacturing Industry, pharmaceutical importation, medical representatives, national poisons unit, drug information units and drug regulatory areas including pharmacovigilance and pharmacoeconomic cost centres. Moreover, you will also be skilled to contribute to laboratory work including research laboratories, pharmaceutical quality control laboratories, analytical laboratories, biotechnology laboratories such as those offering DNA services and pharmacogenetic testing as well as toxicology laboratories. The course will also open the path to academic careers in the areas of pharmacology, pharmacotoxicology, biotechnology and related life sciences.

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