AUT 2026 Undergraduate Courses from School of Pharmacy

Submitted by Meera Roy on

Colleagues,

 

From the School of Pharmacy:  Autumn courses for those exploring health, pharmacy, and pharmaceutical sciences. 

 

PHARM 301 Medications and Health: It's Not All About Drugs (3) SSc/NSc

Explore how medications fit into overall health and healthcare. Learn about drug development, how medications work, and careers in health sciences—especially pharmacy. Accessible to all students.

 

PHRMSC 313 Drug Disposition and Delivery (3) NSc

Introduction to how drugs are formulated, delivered, and move through the body. Covers key concepts in pharmaceutics and pharmaceutical sciences. Best for STEM students.

 

NEW PHRMSC 330 / HEOR 340 / ECON 344 Intro Health Economics (3) SSc

Applies microeconomic tools to understand the structure and failures of US healthcare markets, covering health insurance design, provider incentives, pharmaceutical pricing, and the policy debates shaping American healthcare today. Accessible to all students.

 

PHRMSC 401 Principles of Pharmacology (2) NSc

Handson, smallgroup course focused on how drugs work in the body. Apply pharmacology concepts to real clinical cases, drug interactions, and disease states. Best for STEM students.

 

PHRMSC 452 Biotechnology and Biopharmaceuticals (2)

Current topics in pharmaceuticals and biotechnology focusing on transforming small molecules, proteins, and genes into therapeutic products. Includes new drug therapies, drug design, pharmacogenomics, molecular modeling, high throughput screen, production and stability considerations, and delivery systems of protein and gene therapeutics in relation to pharmacokinetic and therapeutic responses. Best for STEM students.

 

PHRMSC 481 Current Trends in Medicinal Chemistry (1)

Current topics in active research relevant to professional pharmacy practice. Topics include drug metabolism, molecular mechanisms of diseases progression, large molecule drug development and analysis, or related research within the Department of Medicinal Chemistry. Best for STEM students.

 

Questions? Email Susan Inman, Undergraduate Program Specialist in the School of Pharmacy, at sop-ugrad@uw.edu.

News Topic
Share