Go beyond the script.
Pharmacists help improve health outcomes for communities, while enjoying an amazing work–life balance.
As medicine experts, pharmacists work directly with patients, helping them understand their medicines and how to use them in the most effective way.
Pharmacists are essential members of the healthcare team. They’re trusted by other healthcare professionals to assess prescriptions and recommend the best combination of medicines.
But this is just part of their role. As a pharmacist, you can also assess and treat health conditions, prescribe medication, and give life-saving vaccinations. This is the future of pharmacy – going beyond the script.
What is pharmacy?
Pharmacists often work in community pharmacies, in hospital pharmacies and in medical clinics.
For these reasons, pharmacists are the health professionals you see most often. They’re truly at the heart of healthy communities.
Pharmacists can continue on to become pharmaceutical scientists to develop new medicines – or with government and research organisations.
Some patients have chronic or ongoing health issues, and rely on regular contact with community pharmacists to help manage their conditions. Other patients have an acute (short-term) condition that can be treated by medication.
As a pharmacist, you can make an authentic difference to the lives of your patients, their whānau, and their communities.
Background required
There are no subject requirements for entry into the Health Sciences First Year (HSFY) programme, which makes up the first year of the pharmacy degree, but we strongly recommend you take Biology, Chemistry, and Physics to Year 13.
HSFY must be your first year of university study and can only be studied at Otago. If you are considering tertiary study before enrolling, you are strongly advised to contact Health Sciences Admissions first.
What will I study?
After selection from Health Sciences First Year (HSFY), or from one of the other categories, you will commence your pharmacy degree in the second year of university study. Here you will build on the foundational sciences that underpin pharmacy such as drug design, delivery and pharmacology. You will learn about the practice and role of pharmacists in improving the health outcomes of patients and focus on person-centred care in clinical settings and patients in the community.
The integrated papers are supported by a comprehensive skills programme that teaches you how to apply what you learn to the practice of pharmacy. You’ll get hands-on time in our Virtual Professional Practice Laboratory, where you’ll use the latest procedures and technologies. You’ll also get real-life experience at our pharmacy clinic – the only university pharmacy clinic in New Zealand and Australia – and opportunities to learn in different types of pharmacy environments alongside practising pharmacists.
Once you complete your fourth year and graduate, there is a one-year, pre-registration internship programme which is overseen by the Pharmacy Council of New Zealand. This is undertaken as paid employment at an approved site in a hospital or community pharmacy.
Admission to the programme
There are 120 places available for New Zealand students and some additional places for international students.
Admission to pharmacy is competitive, you can apply:
- At the end of Health Sciences First Year (HSFY). Entry is based on your grades achieved during this year. You will have a better chance of admission if you apply under the Single Programme Preference (where you only apply for pharmacy).
- In the Graduate category, once you have completed two or more years of University study.
- In the Alternative category.
We strongly encourage students who are of Māori or Indigenous Pacific descent to apply to Pharmacy. Please request this to be taken into account as part of your application.
Immunity status
Students who are admitted to pharmacy are required to be vaccinated during their first year of the programme, if necessary.
Refer to the Immunity status section of the Guidelines for Admission page
International applications
Persons who do not hold New Zealand citizenship or permanent residency should contact the University’s International Office.
Postgraduate study
The School of Pharmacy has a comprehensive postgraduate programme, including pharmacy professional programmes up to master’s level.
The School also offers research qualifications such as a master’s and PhD.
Career opportunities
You will have many opportunities as a pharmacist. You can work in, and/or own, a community pharmacy and enjoy close relationships with the local community by making medicine-related decisions, monitoring patient therapy, and consulting with physicians and other healthcare providers. Alternatively, you could work in a clinic and provide advice to patients and healthcare professionals about medicines.
As a hospital pharmacist, you are able to specialise in many areas, for example: diabetes, paediatrics, intensive care, respiratory medicine, infectious diseases, cardiology, mental health, cancer management, and more. Hospital pharmacists are a core team member and contribute to hospital ward rounds with the medical team, advise medical and nursing staff, and provide information to patients about their medicines.
Pharmacists also fulfil important roles in places such as the Ministry of Health, Medsafe (medicines registration agency), universities, drug companies, pharmacy regulatory bodies, Pharmac and the armed forces.
Finally, pharmacists can continue their education and complete graduate studies in a variety of disciplines including clinical pharmacy practice, clinical pharmacology, pharmaceutical sciences, and social and administrative pharmacy and embrace additional careers in academia or industry.
How to apply
Application information for admission into the Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm) programme is available on the Division of Health Sciences website:
Pharmacy: Guidelines for Admission
Pharmacy qualifications
Explore your study options further. Refer to enrolment information found on the following qualification pages:
- Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm)
- Postgraduate Certificate in Pharmacy (PGCertPharm)
- Postgraduate Certificate in Pharmacist Prescribing (PGCertPharmPres)
- Postgraduate Diploma in Clinical Pharmacy (PGDipClinPharm)
- Master of Clinical Pharmacy (MClinPharm)
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Programme requirements
Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm)
Note: Students who commenced with Second Year papers prior to 2018 should refer to the 2017 University of Otago Calendar for current Third Year and Fourth Year paper requirements.
Year | Papers | Points |
---|---|---|
1st year | Health Sciences First Year Course Note: Students enrolled in the Health Sciences First Year course will be required to achieve a satisfactory mark in a standard diagnostic English test or another approved measure of achievement. | 126 |
2nd year | PHCY 210 Introduction to Pharmacy PHCY 211 Fundamental Pharmaceutical Science PHCY 220 Integrated Modules A Note: Candidates for the second and subsequent years of the BPharm programme will normally have passed all papers for the previous year of study. | 12 48 60 |
3rd year | PHCY 310 Integrated Modules B PHCY 320 Integrated Modules C | 60 60 |
4th year | PHCY 410 Elective Studies A | 15 |
Bachelor of Pharmacy with Honours (BPharm(Hons))
Year | Papers | Points |
---|---|---|
1st year | Health Sciences First Year Course Note: Students enrolled in the Health Sciences First Year course will be required to achieve a satisfactory mark in a standard diagnostic English test or another approved measure of achievement. | 126 |
2nd year | PHCY 210 Introduction to Pharmacy PHCY 211 Fundamental Pharmaceutical Science PHCY 220 Integrated Modules A Note: Candidates for the second and subsequent years of the BPharm programme will normally have passed all papers for the previous year of study. | 12 48 60 |
3rd year | PHCY 310 Integrated Modules B PHCY 320 Integrated Modules C | 60 60 |
4th year | PHCY 410 Elective Studies A PHCY 420 Pharmacy Practice Leadership and Management PHCY 431 Structured Practical Experiential Programme PHCY 480 Honours Research Project PHCY 485 Applied Pharmacotherapy and Patient Care for Honours | 15 15 20 36 58 |
Postgraduate Certificate in Pharmacist Prescribing (PGCertPharmPres)
Papers |
---|
Papers
Paper code | Year | Title | Points | Teaching period |
---|---|---|---|---|
PHCY210 | 2023 | Introduction to Pharmacy | 12 points | Semester 1 |
PHCY211 | 2023 | Fundamental Pharmaceutical Science | 48 points | Semester 1 |
PHCY220 | 2023 | Integrated Modules A | 60 points | Semester 2 |
PHCY310 | 2023 | Integrated Modules B | 60 points | Semester 1 |
PHCY320 | 2023 | Integrated Modules C | 60 points | Semester 2 |
PHCY410 | 2023 | Elective Studies A | 15 points | Full Year |
PHCY420 | 2023 | Pharmacy Practice Leadership and Management | 15 points | Full Year |
PHCY430 | 2023 | Elective Studies B | 15 points | Full Year |
PHCY431 | 2023 | Structured Practical Experiential Programme | 20 points | Full Year |
PHCY432 | 2023 | Applied Pharmacotherapy and Patient Care | 55 points | Full Year |
PHCY480 | 2023 | Honours Research Project | 36 points | 1st Non standard period |
PHCY485 | 2023 | Applied Pharmacotherapy and Patient Care for Honours | 58 points | Full Year |
PHCY510 | 2023 | Evidence-Based Practice | 30 points | Not offered, expected to be offered in 2025 |
PHCY511 | 2023 | Patient-Centred Care | 30 points | Not offered, expected to be offered in 2025 |
PHCY520 | 2023 | Applied patient-centred care | 30 points | Semester 1 |
PHCY521 | 2023 | Elective topics in patient-centred care | 30 points | Semester 2 |
PHCY590 | 2023 | Dissertation | 60 points | Full Year, 1st Non standard period, 2nd Non standard period, 3rd Non standard period, 4th Non standard period, 5th Non standard period, 6th Non standard period, 7th Non standard period, 8th Non standard period |
PSCI201 | 2023 | Pharmaceutical Chemistry | 18 points | Semester 1 |
PSCI202 | 2023 | Medicines and Disease | 18 points | Semester 2 |
PSCI203 | 2023 | Formulation Principles I | 18 points | Semester 1 |
PSCI204 | 2023 | Formulation Principles II | 18 points | Semester 2 |
Key information for future students
Contact us
School of Pharmacy
Tel +64 3 479 7271
Email pharmacy@otago.ac.nz
Web otago.ac.nz/pharmacy