Explore a historical lecture examining the complex evolution of pharmacy's professional identity in Britain and its relationship with chemistry and medicine. Delve into the fascinating question of why pharmacists can be called chemists while chemists cannot be called pharmacists, tracing back to 19th-century professionalization efforts. Learn about the influence of chemical discoveries in the late 18th century and how forward-thinking chemists and druggists recognized the importance of chemical knowledge in pharmacy education. Discover the French chemist Antoine François Fourcroy's perspective on pharmacy's subordinate position to chemistry, and how British doctors like Anthony Todd Thomson supported this view. Examine the founding of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain in 1841 and its aspirations to establish pharmacy as a fourth branch of medicine. Understand the significant impact of the 1852 Pharmacy Act, which created a statutory register of pharmaceutical chemists, and how subsequent legislation, including the 1858 Medical Act and 1868 Pharmacy and Poisons Act, shaped the professional boundaries and protected titles within the field.
Pharmacy in Britain - Division of Medicine or Branch of Chemistry
Royal Society Of Chemistry via YouTube
Overview
Syllabus
Stuart Anderson: Pharmacy in Britain: Division of Medicine or Branch of Chemistry?
Taught by
Royal Society Of Chemistry