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UMass Lowell pharmaceutical sciences major combines science and business classes

Pharmaceutical sciences major Christina Ciaramitaro prepares a gel in an analytical instrumentation lab.
Pharmaceutical sciences major Christina Ciaramitaro prepares a gel in an analytical instrumentation lab.

Two years ago, Christina Ciaramitaro and a dozen other students entered UMass Lowell as the first freshmen to major in .

The major combines  and  classes to prepare students for jobs in the booming biotech and pharmaceutical (biopharma) industry. 

Growing up, Ciaramitaro had family members who participated in clinical trials. Now, she鈥檇 like to work in drug development research, and she thinks her business background will come in handy.

鈥淚 like the hard sciences, but I like having a background in business, too 鈥 and down the road, I feel like business knowledge is good for anything,鈥 she says.

The pharmaceutical sciences major is part of the . It combines a rigorous science curriculum with business classes in , marketing, business analytics, organizational behavior, innovation and entrepreneurship, management and quality control.

, now assistant dean in the , took the lead in creating and launching the major, in collaboration with  Assoc. Dean  and faculty from both colleges.

鈥淲e have such a big pharmaceutical industry in Massachusetts, but no one was serving that market of having sales reps who would understand the science and having scientists who can translate their work for other people inside their organizations,鈥 Percival says. 鈥溾淲e thought, 鈥楾his is an industry need and students are trying to figure it out on their own with various majors and minors, so let鈥檚 make it easy for them and build an interdisciplinary program.鈥欌

Pharmaceutical sciences major Khadija Sinkinah, left, nutritional sciences major Sadie Reppucci and Ciaramitaro listen to Biomedical Lab Specialist Kellee Cardaleen.
Pharmaceutical sciences major Khadija Sinkinah, left, nutritional sciences major Sadie Reppucci and Ciaramitaro listen to Biomedical Lab Specialist Kellee Cardaleen.

Biomedical and Nutritional Sciences Assoc. Teaching Prof. , the new coordinator for the undergraduate program, says the major is designed to prepare students for careers ranging from research work in labs to pharmaceutical sales and project management.

鈥淚n pharma, there are scientific research positions, financial and business managers, and the people in between 鈥 and the people in between need to understand both pharmaceutical science and business,鈥 Dulak says. 鈥淭here are many paths a student can take after earning this degree: pharma, biotech, biomedical research in an academic setting, or continuing their education for an advanced degree.鈥

According to the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council,  grew by 5.5% in 2020. That brought the total number of jobs in the state to nearly 85,000, representing a 92% increase over the past 15 years.

The program offers several paths for career advancement for its graduates.  They can go on for a  or  or a 尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 in  if they want to be research scientists or lab managers, Dulak says. 

If they prefer the business side of the industry, they can use their free electives to complete a minor in business 鈥 and go on for an  through the bachelor鈥檚-to-尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 program.

鈥淪ome students may also choose the MBA because it鈥檚 online, while our 尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 degrees require some in-person, evening lab classes,鈥 Dulak says.

Even without a business minor or an MBA, the business classes embedded in the pharmaceutical sciences major give students additional skills to prepare for the changing industry 鈥 both when they start out and as their careers advance, Percival says.

鈥淗aving some of this business acumen to start out with might help them move their careers along a little better and give them a longer-term view of having these other doors open to them, including an MBA in the future,鈥 she says.

Pharmaceutical sciences majors Sabrina Iv, left, and Marinthus Hem prepare for a lab in analytical instrumentation.
Pharmaceutical sciences majors Sabrina Iv, left, and Marinthus Hem prepare for a lab in analytical instrumentation.

The degree鈥檚 versatility is what led David Phang 鈥20 to transfer into the brand-new major during his senior year. Phang studied  for three years before switching to a double major in pharmaceutical sciences and . By that time, he had worked as a nursing aide at Lowell General Hospital for four years.

鈥淚 enjoyed taking care of patients, but I couldn鈥檛 see doing it for the rest of my life, so I was looking for a career change,鈥 he says. 

After making the switch, he found a new job at Boston Heart Diagnostics in Framingham, Massachusetts, helping to process COVID-19 antibody tests. 

Next, he got a job at Vertex Pharmaceuticals, where he鈥檚 working in a lab on gene therapy treatments for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. He鈥檚 also working on his 尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 in pharmaceutical sciences through the bachelor鈥檚-to-尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 program so he can move up through the research ranks faster.

Although he鈥檚 chosen the scientific path, he says he鈥檚 found his business background useful.

鈥淚t's helped me with operations in large-scale industry, especially what I learned about lean manufacturing, supply chain inventory management and organization,鈥 he says.

David Maxwell 鈥21, who switched from  into pharmaceutical sciences, is taking the business pathway. He鈥檇 always enjoyed science, but the business classes grew on him. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to sit behind a desk, at a computer, Monday through Friday, eight hours a day,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut as I went through the program, I learned there are more aspects to business that I enjoyed, like manufacturing and operations.鈥

Now he鈥檚 studying full time for .  He鈥檚 confident he will find a job as soon as he finishes his online degree next May.

鈥淚 talked to a couple of people in the pharma industry, and they said there鈥檚 a lot of health people and a lot of businesspeople, but not many people who do both and can tie them together,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o I saw a vacuum there, and I decided to fill it.鈥