Key Features of Patient-Centric Pharmacy Education in NUS

Bachelor of Pharmacy (Honours)

The Bachelor of Pharmacy (Honours) programme is the only professional Pharmacy degree programme in Singapore that educates and trains its graduates to become registered pharmacists. It offers an integrated curriculum through an active learning approach, incorporating experiential learning. Students will get to engage with the public, patients and healthcare professionals from Year 1. This contextualises learning, hones skills and develops their professional identity. 

Graduates will acquire competencies to work in a complex healthcare system that is increasingly technology driven. A pharmacist is a medication expert who optimises the health outcomes of patients and provides transformational leadership to shape the future of healthcare.

Programme

7 March 2026
Saturday

NUS Open Day (Live)

College of Alice and Peter Tan and
Residential College 4 Dining Hall

D2

Masterclass

Chua Thian Poh Hall

D5

Pharmacy Booth (D4)

Come interact with our professors and students at our booth at the College of Alice and Peter Tan Multi-purpose Hall (D4). Pharmacy talks are held at Residential College 4 and College of Alice and Peter Tan Dining Hall (D2). The masterclasses are held at Chua Thian Poh Hall (D5)

Not sure how to get to the venues? Check out the routes here.

Hear from our Pharmily!

#PassionPridePurpose

Think you know what pharmacists do? Think again.

Find out for yourself the many rewarding careers you can embark on with the BPharm (Hons) degree from NUS Pharmacy.

Click on each poster to view enlarged version

Resources

Brochure

FAQs

Contact Us

For further information of our programme, visit our department website.

Box Story

New bent-toed gecko species in Timor-Leste

“We have barely scratched the surface of Timor-Leste’s biodiversity. New discoveries can have profound impacts on conservation and policy-making.”

In August 2022, we led an expedition to Timor-Leste in collaboration with Conservation International and the government of Timor-Leste. The Museum’s herpetologist, Dr CHAN Kin Onn, discovered a new species of bent-toed gecko which was named Cyrtodactylus santana, in reference to the Nino Konis Santana National Park, in which the gecko was discovered.