About

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Program Mission

Our mission is to prepare students for meaningful careers that provide opportunities to advocate for and implement pharmaceutical innovations to meet ever-changing healthcare challenges through relevant, rigorous, and socially informed coursework.

Program Details

Innovative, Impactful, Accessible

Leaders in the psychoactive pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries – especially in the rapid-growth areas of psychedelic, entheogen, and cannabinoid research and application – are seeking employees with advanced degrees, appropriate training, and real-world experience. The Psychoactive Pharmaceutical Investigation Master’s program from the University of Wisconsin–Madison was designed from the ground up as an interdisciplinary online curriculum that prepares you to meet these needs, while giving you the background and in-demand skills needed to begin your career with an advantage or effectively transition into this exciting subfield. Graduates of this first-of-its-kind degree program will have the unique credentials to compete as outstanding applicants in industrial, not-for-profit, or academic research environments.

Importantly, the UW–Madison Master’s program in Psychoactive Pharmaceutical Investigation is not only the first accredited degree option for those students interested in pursuing the advanced study of psychedelic science, but is also dedicated to bringing this world-class educational opportunity to a truly global audience.

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“Work in a highly-respected institution with good people doing solid, reputable research, pick up as many skills as you can along the way (for you never know which will ultimately be useful) then pursue what it is that you genuinely want to do… ”

R. Andrew Sewell, MD
(Author, “So You Want to Be a Psychedelic Researcher?”)

MAPS Bulletin, Vol 16(2); Autumn 2006

Earn your degree from Experts

Program instructors are active clinicians, clinicians, researchers, and scholars with expertise in neuropharmacology, neuroscience, regulatory affairs, research ethics, biostatistics, pharmacokinetics, psychiatry, addiction medicine, counselling psychology, history of medicine, cultural studies, human ecology, ethnobotany, and beyond. Combined, they have decades of clinical experience, dozens of active psychoactive pharmaceutical research projects, hundreds of successful graduate trainees, and thousands of original publications. Their numerous leadership roles, appointments, and consultancies support a robust network of international connections across the research and scholarly societies, not-for-profit institutes, governmental agencies, and industry partners.

How you’ll learn

  • 30-credit curriculum, with flexibility to complete in 1 – 3 years
  • Degree can be completed entirely online
  • Face-to-face options are available for some elective courses, held on the UW–Madison campus

Curriculum

Our MS curriculum is driven by contributions from experienced clinicians, groundbreaking researchers, dedicated scholars, and industry professionals with decades of experience in psychoactive pharmaceutical investigation. This outstanding group of instructors blends science with professional skills and the humanities, across four interconnected curricular content domains: Drug Development, Program Management, Clinical Application, and History and Humanities.

The core courses in the MS curriculum are weighted to provide comprehensive, in-depth coverage for the drug development and program management domains, giving students the high-quality, career-focused technical information they will need to succeed from their very first day on the job.

Ensuring meaningful overlapping coverage with clinical applications and history and humanities domains is also part of the innovative tradition of the UW–Madison School of Pharmacy. In 1907, Edward Kremers introduced, for the first time anywhere in the United States, a class on the history of pharmacy. Since that time, the UW–Madison SoP has continuously offered its students a class about the history of the profession, and this program is proud to honors and expand that legacy in regard to this uniquely interdisciplinary topic.

Specialized electives, including the ability to engage in real-world research or internship experiences with our faculty and with external industry partners, provide MS graduates with the opportunity to customize their experience by gaining a greater depth of knowledge in the domain of their choice, so that they can excel throughout the duration of their own individual career trajectory.

For those individuals primarily interested in positions involving clinical duties, policy development, or other roles that do not require detailed training in pharmaceutical research operations, the capstone certificate curriculum has an emphasis on the clinical applications and historical and humanities domains of psychoactive pharmaceutical investigation. All courses in the capstone can be applied to the MS, should any individual want to continue on to complete the full degree.

Core Courses

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PHARMACY 563 – Drug History: Dangerous Drugs and Magic Bullets

A history of medicinal substances and dangerous drugs in wider context, with a focus on gender, race, class, business, and other analytical categories. “Medicines” and “drugs” change over time — and concepts of risk, danger, legality, and even scientific evidence are elastic. Histories of laws, regulations, and key historical actors, as well as specific drug biographies, will be provided.

Primary Domain: History and Humanities
Secondary Domains: Clinical Application, Drug Development

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Outline the key theoretical issues in history of medicine and drugs.
2. Explain the relationship, including explanatory models of change, between specific medicines and drugs and society.
3. Assess critically the historiographies of the history of medicine.
4. Evaluate the reputations of specific medicines, medicinal substances and drugs.
5. Communicate effectively conclusions regarding the history of medicines and drugs
6. Apply historical understandings to contemporary issues regarding drug regulation and political conflicts

PHARMACY 612 – Legal Structures for Controlled Substances

Discusses federal statutes and regulations related to drug manufacturing, drug distribution, and drug use, with an emphasis on drug scheduling and controlled substances. Describes the governmental framework within which pharmaceutical development is regulated and practiced. Covers statues and regulations protecting human subjects’ privacy and autonomy in research.

Primary Domain: Program Management
Secondary Domains: Drug Development, Clinical Application

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Identify and describe the major federal statutes and regulations affecting use of controlled substances
2. Identify potential legal problems in use and handling of controlled substances before they may occur
3. Apply knowledge of the statutes/regulations to various research setting
4. Locate and identify reputable sources of legal information

PHARMACY 640 – Appropriate Use of Abused Drugs

Discusses the biological and pharmacological basis of dependence of substances of abuse. Teaches the skills required for best practices in prescribing agents of abuse. Drugs of abuse covered include opioids use for acute and chronic pain, in addition to other abused substances such as cannabinoids, psychedelics, amphetamines and related agents. Students will learn appropriate methods of therapeutic tapering and treatment of withdrawal, as well as the treatment of known and unknown agent overdose. Teaches skills in interpreting and responding to findings of urine drug tests and the prescription drug monitoring database.

Primary Domain: Clinical Application
Secondary Domain: History and Humanities

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Demonstrate knowledge about the neuro-and psycho-pharmacology of substance dependence
2. Define and distinguish between substance use, misuse, abuse and dependence
3. Explain the public health implications of substance misuse
4. Identify optimal treatment of patients with chronic, malignant pain, including management, alternative opioid-sparing approaches, and how to address opioid use disorders
5. Interpret urine drug tests and the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, and create patient treatment plans based upon these findings
6. Understand pharmacology, appropriate use and misuse of CNS stimulants and CNS depressants
7. Identify the symptoms of toxicity from overdoses of abused drugs
8. Manage patients admitted with toxicity from overdoses of abused drugs
9. Anticipate the agents of misuse in specific populations as athletes and students

PHARMACY 671 – Psychedelic Drugs in Science and Society

Overview of the science behind therapeutic use of psychedelic drugs such as psilocybin and LSD; basic medicinal chemistry of the tryptamine and phenethylamine psychedelics, as well as the neurochemistry and neuropharmacology of their action. Fundamentals of drug development and FDA approval process; Standards of screening and guiding individuals before and during a therapeutic psychedelic session contrasted with the recreational use of these drugs; Appraisal of current clinical research including an objective analysis of risk/benefit for indications such as depression and addiction. History of traditional, ceremonial use of psychedelics, as well as the relationship between recreational use and attempts to regulate and restrict their use. Role of psychedelics in indigenous cultures, impacts of psychedelic tourism and wild-crafting of plants and animals on indigenous peoples. Contrasts in psychedelic treatments to other therapeutic interventions such as mindfulness and meditation.

Primary Domain: Clinical Application
Secondary Domains: History and Humanities, Drug Development

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Describe the roles of psychedelic compounds in the traditional rituals of indigenous peoples, and the impact of psychedelic tourism upon these native societies and their environment.
2. Describe the history and rationale for the regulation and prohibition of these compounds in the past century.
3. Describe the similarities between efforts to decriminalize cannabis and psychedelics, including pros and cons for each position.
4. Describe the path by which psychedelic drugs may be proposed to the FDA for approval drugs, and rescheduled by the DEA.
5. Identify the basic chemical structures of the most common psychedelic tryptamines and phenethylamines, and their usual pharmacologic targets in the brain.
6. Describe and critique examples of the research literature on the human use of psilocybin and LSD for the treatment of diseases such as depression and substance abuse disorders, including proposed metrics of effect.
7. Describe the usual screening, preparation, and care of a subject receiving psilocybin, and the expected skills, training, and role of the attending clinicians.
8. Describe the relationship of psychedelic treatment to other methods of care such as meditation, mindfulness, and cognitive behavioral therapy.

PHARMACY 674 – Cannabinoids in Science and Society

Provides an overview of the history, botany, and legal policies of cannabis and examines cannabinoid pharmacology and the most common therapeutic applications. Assessment of cannabinoid therapy with an emphasis on evaluating the risks and benefits of cannabinoid therapy for these conditions, product and dose regimen selection, monitoring and titration.

Primary Domain: Clinical Application
Secondary Domain: Drug Development, History and Humanities

LEARNING OUTCOMES:

1. Describe the role of the endocannabinoid system in human disease.
2. Identify appropriate cannabinoid use in various disease states.
3. Describe the mechanism of action of THC and CBD on several body systems and disease states.
4. Explain the pharmacology of THC and CBD.
5. Describe common / serious drug interactions and adverse effects of cannabis therapies and methods for preventing or minimizing their occurrence.
6. Analyze and present primary and lay literature regarding cannabinoid therapy.

PHARMACY 770 & 771 – CNS Drug Designs, Actions, and Applications I & II

This two-course series provides a foundational understanding of how chemical features can influence the biological activity of a molecule on molecular targets within the central nervous system (CNS), how alteration of signaling through these targets occurs and leads to physiologically relevant changes, and how major classes of pharmaceuticals acting on the central nervous system are applied in healthcare settings to improve patient outcomes. Integration between concepts arising at the chemical, molecular, cellular, systems, organism, and societal levels will be explored.

Primary Domain: Drug Development
Secondary Domains: Clinical Application

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Identify CNS active drug classes and origins of psychoactive drugs, based in part on structural aspects of the molecule
2. List physicochemical properties of drugs that influence their ability to access the CNS
3. Recall anatomical structures and molecular machinery that influences drug access to and efflux from the CNS
4. Describe the major neurotransmitters of the central nervous system, including their physiological role, distribution, synthesis, storage, and release
5. Recall the principal mechanisms by which receptors affect cellular signaling in the CNS
6. Compare and contrast the actions of psychoactive pharmaceuticals on different signaling systems within the CNS
7. Recognize the psychiatric conditions and target symptoms of these conditions that are commonly treated with psychoactive pharmaceuticals
8. Explain how the use of psychoactive pharmaceuticals fits in with other non-pharmacologic approaches to clinical care for psychiatric conditions
9. Describe common / serious adverse effects of psychoactive pharmaceuticals and methods for preventing or minimizing their occurrence
10. Match psychoactive pharmaceutical agents to the psychiatric conditions they are commonly used to treat

PHARMACY 801 – Bioethics and Scientific Integrity

Familiarizes graduate students with basic ethical issues associated with biomedical science research, taught via a case study approach. Content structured to meet NIH and NSF requirements for Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) training.

Primary Domain: Program Management
Secondary Domains: Clinical Application, History and Humanities

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
Evaluate ethical issues and the responsible conduct of biomedical clinical and translational research spanning the following topic areas:
1. Research misconduct and policies for handling misconduct
2. Ethical consideration for human subjects and role of institutional review boards
3. Ethical consideration for live vertebrate animal subjects in research
4. Mentor/trainee responsibilities and relationships
5. Data acquisition and laboratory tools
6. Data management, sharing and ownership
7. Conflict of interest (personal, professional, and financial)
8. Responsible authorship, peer review, and publication
9. Intellectual property
10. Collaborative research

PHM SCI 757 — Introduction to Drug Development

Scientific process of drug development from discovery through clinical trials. Brief history of drug development, along with an overview of drug discovery, preclinical, and clinical activities that take place during development. Application to real-world drug development scenarios and challenges, especially as they apply to development of drugs to treat neurological diseases.

Primary Domain: Drug Development
Secondary Domain: Program Management

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Provide historical context for the modern drug discovery and development process.
2. Describe the high-level goals and activities that take place during discovery, preclinical development, and clinical development and the different functional areas that perform this work.
3. Apply the knowledge learned throughout the course to address specific drug development scenarios.
4. Propose novel strategies to address current drug development challenges.
5. Evaluate scientific literature and regulatory documents to find important information about specific drugs.

PHM SCI 751 — Introduction to Regulatory Practice

Identifies and examines the key regulatory agencies and practices that govern the highly regulated and diverse biotechnology industry, both domestically and internationally. Highlights current and emerging FDA and ICH regulations and guidance documents to successfully navigate meeting with the agencies and to submit required documentation for successful product development.

Primary Domain: Drug Development
Secondary Domain: Program Management

LEARNING OUTCOMES:

1. Identify which specific regulatory pathways apply to different aspects of drug approval in the US.
2. Associate these regulations with actions to be taken in the different phases of drug development and post approval commitments.
3. Apply this knowledge to address various regulatory challenges and obstacles that occur during the long process and with the varying phases of drug development.

PHM SCI 753 — Project Management in Drug Development

Key concepts and body of knowledge of Project Management (PM) applied to the specifics of the drug development process. PM theory and language. The life cycle of a project: Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring and Control, and Closing. Predictive, adaptive and hybrid PM frameworks and tools. Project Charter, statement-of-work, scope of work, work-breakdown structure, project network and timelines. Critical path method and earned value analysis to adjust schedules, allocate resources, and implement corrective actions. Risk management in pharmaceutical projects. An overview of documents management and decision-making strategies.

Primary Domain: Program Management
Secondary Domain: Drug Development

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Explain the concepts, principles and language of PM and its impact and role in the 2. Describe the functions of a Project Manager in general and within the drug development process (pre-clinical and clinical phases).
3. Compare and contrast different frameworks and tools of PM to make informed decisions on tailoring the PM approach to suit the project needs.
4. Develop a project charter, statement-of-work, scope of work, work-breakdown structure, a resource-loaded timeline, and a project plan.
5. Apply the critical path method and earned-value analysis to track progress and forecast outcomes against a project’s plan baseline.
6. Weight proper corrective measures according to earned-value analysis forecast methods, to ensure a project’s outcomes and deliverables.
7. Implement risk identification, mitigation and management strategies during project planning (pre-mortem), life cycle, and project closeout (post-mortem).
8. onsolidate the PM concepts and principles studied during the course by developing a Project Plan as Final Project.

PHM SCI 759 — Current Trends in Drug Discovery and Development

Provides the experience and skill to find, read and critically analyze scientific and regulatory literature in the field of drug discovery and development.

Primary Domain: Drug Development
Secondary Domains: Clinical Application, History and Humanities

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Know where to search for appropriate primary literature and guidance documents associated with drug discovery and development.
2. Critically analyze primary research literature, guidance documents and investigative journalism in the field of drug discovery and development.
3. Succinctly and accurately communicate the merits and limitations of primary drug discovery and development research publications, guidance documents and investigative journalism.
4. Become comfortable and confident communicating in a team setting and online environment.

Electives

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BOTANY 474 – Ethnobotany

Study of the interactions between human cultures and plants. Topics include: traditional resource management and agriculture; crop domestication, evolution, and conservation; archaeobotany; indigenous knowledge; folk taxonomy; plants in symbolism and religion; dietary patterns; phytochemistry; global movement of plants and peoples.

Primary Domain: History and Humanities

BMI 541 — Introduction to Biostatistics

Course designed for the biomedical researcher. Topics include: descriptive statistics, hypothesis testing, estimation, confidence intervals, t-tests, chi-squared tests, analysis of variance, linear regression, correlation, nonparametric tests, survival analysis and odds ratio. Biomedical applications used for each topic.

Primary Domain: Program Management

PHARMACY 564 – Psychedelic History: Sacred Plants, Science & Psychotherapy

A history of psychedelics in the U.S. and more globally. Read texts that were formative in the development of the history of psychopharmacology, pharmaceuticals, and the “war on drugs.” Examine readings that represent different themes, subfields, or areas of research interest within the history of psychedelics (medicine & science). Beyond biomedicine, types of analysis include: consumerism, class, ethnicity, gender, and military history. Histories of laws, regulations, and key historical actors, as well as specific drug biographies, will be provided.

Primary Domain: History and Humanities

PHARMACY 632 – Neuroscience of Psychedelics

Explore the mechanisms of action of classical psychedelics in the brain, including their effects on the neural basis of perception, cognition, and consciousness, and how these actions underlie their success as pharmacological adjuncts for treating psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, and substance use disorder.

Primary Domain: Drug Development

PHM SCI 699 – Advanced Independent Study

Directed study projects as arranged with a faculty member.

Primary Domains: Clinical Application / Program Management

PHM SCI 768 — Pharmacokinetics

Quantitative aspects of drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. Philosophy and applications of pharmacokinetic modeling and its use in clinical practice.

Primary Domain: Clinical Application

PHM SCI 754 — Business Tools for Pharmaceutical Sciences

Explores business aspects of pharmaceutical product development and post-approval product maturation. Covers startup financing, risk management, intellectual property considerations, supply chain management, and strategic decision-making, as applied to both large and small pharmaceutical companies.

Primary Domain: Program Management

PHM SCI 760 – Summative Research Internship

Summation of core coursework to a real-world project and/or internship experience. Synthesis of knowledge, skills and abilities to demonstrate aptitude for careers in respective industries.

Primary Domain: Drug Development

“Contact, daily contact, with those whose thoughts run along other channels, is one of the greatest factors in true education of all students.”

Edward Kremers
(2nd Director of UW Department of Pharmacy)

Pricing

Tuition

Credits are $1,500 for residents and non-residents.

Financial Aid

As part of our commitment to supporting student access to this program, scholarships are available. Please refer to the scholarship page for more information.

Students in this program are also eligible for Federal Student Aid.

To apply for financial aid, please visit the FAFSA website and complete the online registration. When applying for aid you will need the University of Wisconsin–Madison Institution Code: 003895.

For more information about Federal Student Aid, please visit the UW Office of Student Financial Aid.

Additional Policy

Students enrolled in the Psychoactive Pharmaceutical Investigation, MS program are not allowed to accept research assistantships, teaching assistantships, project assistantships or other University appointments which grant waivers of tuition and/or academic fees. Accepting an assistantship or tuition waiver while enrolled in the program may lead to removal of the student from the MS in Psychoactive Pharmaceutical Investigation student cohort. Corporate tuition support is not included in these categories, nor is the waiver of tuition due to veteran status.

Did  you know?

UW–Madison is one of the top 10 research universities in the U.S., with more than 40 specific graduate programs (including Pharmacy) also ranked in the top 10.