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Does medicinal chemistry (master of medicine) count as pharmacy?

First, pharmaceutical chemistry in pharmaceutical universities is generally a "Master of Science". People who study medicine must think that pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacy and pharmaceutical analysis are all "pharmacy".

Second, if you have a bachelor's degree, it is generally divided into pharmacy, clinical pharmacy, pharmacy and medicinal chemistry, so medicinal chemistry is not pharmacy, because there is a major called "pharmacy" on the graduation certificate, and institutions will not recognize it. Master's degree and doctor's degree are generally divided into disciplines, so there is no master's degree in pharmacy (except that some professional masters are relatively new, with short hours or low requirements and low scores). Therefore, the recruitment of masters and doctors in pharmacy should be counted as medicinal chemistry.

Third, recruiters and personnel departments in many institutions do not understand classification. For example, the pharmacy department of a hospital recruits "pharmacy" instead of pharmacology and medicine, but pharmacy has nothing to do with the hospital. Some local institutions require at least three majors when issuing recruitment brochures. The operation depends on whether the name on the diploma corresponds. Even in the recruitment of civil servants, I have met people who have recruited masters in pharmacy. Pharmacy, ingredients, pharmacology and medicalization are not registered. Only those with "Master of Pharmacy" and low admission scores can sign up, either because they don't know the personnel or because they are "radish pits".

So, this is it. People can't help it if they don't sign up, but if there is an opportunity, try it, chat with personnel, or see if their unit has your major, and prove the relevance, maybe it will be loose. Let them report to the leader.

I hope it helps you.