PhD Pharmacology
Course Overview
This research-intensive course offers a unique opportunity to conduct groundbreaking biomedical science within a world-leading department. You will work alongside experts at the MRC Centre for Drug Safety Science and the Wolfson Centre for Personalized Medicine to translate laboratory discoveries into real-world clinical benefits for patients. The program is designed to advance therapeutic strategies and define the scientific basis of drug safety and efficacy.
Key Program Highlights
- Study within prestigious, MRC-funded research centres dedicated to Drug Safety Science and Personalized Medicine
- Access state-of-the-art facilities and work on projects funded by major bodies like the Wellcome Trust and NIHR
- Focus on translational research that moves laboratory findings into clinical practice for patient benefit
- Investigate key themes including adverse drug reactions, individual drug responses, and immuno-pharmacology
- Engage in the full research spectrum from basic biological studies to human clinical trials
Course Overview
This research-intensive course offers a unique opportunity to conduct groundbreaking biomedical science within a world-leading department. You will work alongside experts at the MRC Centre for Drug Safety Science and the Wolfson Centre for Personalized Medicine to translate laboratory discoveries into real-world clinical benefits for patients. The program is designed to advance therapeutic strategies and define the scientific basis of drug safety and efficacy.
Key Program Highlights
- Study within prestigious, MRC-funded research centres dedicated to Drug Safety Science and Personalized Medicine
- Access state-of-the-art facilities and work on projects funded by major bodies like the Wellcome Trust and NIHR
- Focus on translational research that moves laboratory findings into clinical practice for patient benefit
- Investigate key themes including adverse drug reactions, individual drug responses, and immuno-pharmacology
- Engage in the full research spectrum from basic biological studies to human clinical trials