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What can pharmaceutical college students do when they come out?
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After graduation, pharmaceutical graduates can engage in work related to drug synthesis, drug preparation, drug inspection, drug production and marketing, new drug research and development and quality control, as well as pharmaceutical research, management and teaching. Hospital pharmacy: the advantage is stability. Once you go in, you basically start by picking up medicine from the window. Pharmacy: The job is to stand for 8 hours every day and wait for someone to buy medicine. Pharmaceutical factory: the job is to do quality inspection, which is a useful choice for studying outside the postgraduate entrance examination. Medical Representative: The market is vast, the demand for talents is huge, and the relatively high income is really attractive. If divided in detail, it can be divided into representatives of foreign-funded pharmaceutical companies and representatives of state-owned enterprises, private enterprises and equipment. Postgraduate entrance examination: you can go to the medical department of a foreign-funded pharmaceutical company or the R&D department of a state-owned enterprise. To tell the truth, there are countless undergraduates majoring in pharmacy who graduate every year. In contrast, the college is really not competitive in employment. Of course, if you have outstanding ability and won many honors in school, you won't worry about not finding a good job. It is recognized that the salary of pharmacy is really low and the career development is very narrow. Many people prepare for the future early. I know a buddy who taught himself Japanese during college, went to work in a pharmaceutical factory after graduation, worked as a part-time teacher in a Japanese training class in his spare time, and occasionally took on translation work. He is a little busy and earns a good income.