UK pharmacy schools top planetary health report
A UK university has come top of the class for integrating planetary health and environmental sustainability into its pharmacy school.
Keele Universityâs pharmacy school topped the 2026 Planetary Health Report Card (PHRC) for pharmacy, ahead of 12 other universities â including five other UK pharmacy schools.
The ranking reflects the âongoing commitmentâ to planetary health and sustainability âwhich are among the greatest issues facing health and social care globallyâ, said Keeleâs medicine and health sciences executive dean Professor Christian Mallen.
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âI would like to thank all our students and staff who supported this project which reinforces Keeleâs position as world leaders in this area,â he added.
The PHRC was established in 2019 by a group of students at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine as an âinstitutional advocacy toolâ.
It functions as a âstudent-led, metric-based self-assessment toolâ to evaluate and improve planetary health engagement in health professional schools around its curriculum, research, community outreach, student-led initiatives and campus sustainability.
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Itâs been adapted across 12 health disciplines and now has 212 participating schools across 23 countries.
âThese future healthcare leaders have bravely used their voices to champion climate action within their curricula, institutions, and broader communities,â its 2026 report said.
Curriculum improvement
Itâs the fourth time a report has been produced by the PHRC for pharmacy, and its lead author SĂŒmeyye EylĂŒl Yılmaz said the pharmacy discipline has improved overall compared to last year.
âCurriculum remains the area with the greatest potential for further development,â she said, with interdisciplinary research receiving the best scores across the 13 pharmacy schools.
Other UK pharmacy schools in the list included University College London in second, the University of Nottingham in seventh, the University of Birmingham in eighth, Aston University at ninth and the university of East Anglia at thirteenth.
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Yilmaz said Aston University is recommending a review of its curriculum to embed environmental sustainability into its existing teaching, in areas such as prescribing decisions, deprescribing, polypharmacy, nutrition and experiences on clinical placements.
The PHRC recommended nine ways to improve the how planetary health is embedded into health education.
It called for students to co-design the curriculum and institutions to provide funding to focus on planetary health and publicly report on its progress.
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The PHRC said itâs âimperative that we hold our institutions accountable for educating health students on planetary health and education for sustainable healthcareâ.
It hopes the initiative will generate âresearch to better understand health impacts and solutionsâ, embrace âsustainable practices on our campuses and in our hospitalsâ and will engage with âsurrounding communities that are most affected by environmental threatsâ.
It follows two UK universities being ranked in the top 10 of universities in the world for pharmacy last month.
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