Pharmacy During Colonial Times Continental European Practice vs English Reflection

Reflect on the content assigned for Week #2 using the below questions as a guide, at a minimum:

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What do you think are the most important impact points of this time period on today’s practice?

How do think things would be different if Pharmacy during the Colonial Time was modeled more on the continental European practice vs. English practice? (Hint: look at chapters on Germany, France, Italy, Spain)

Locate additional resources for the content of Week #2. Describe what you found.

  • How effective was the PowerPoint material in presenting this information?
  • What other relevant questions would you ask about this content?
  • Rennebohm Hall n University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy
    777 Highland Avenue n Madison, WI 53705-2222 n 608.262.5378 n aihp@aihp.org
    This slide presentation was compiled and produced by Robert
    McCarthy, Ph.D., Professor and Dean Emeritus at the University of
    Connecticut School of Pharmacy for his class “The History of
    American Pharmacy.” Prof. McCarthy created this version of the
    slide talk for his class in the Spring of 2016.
    This slide presentation was downloaded from the Teaching the
    History of Pharmacy section of the website of the American Institute
    of the History of Pharmacy (https://aihp.org/historicalresources/teaching-the-history-of-pharmacy/) where a copy of the
    syllabus (.pdf) for Prof. McCarthy’s class is also available.
    This .pdf copy of the slide presentation was shared with the permission
    of Prof. Robert McCarthy for the personal and educational use of
    interested readers.
    EARLY PHARMACY IN
    AMERICA
    PHRX 4001W-002
    The History of American Pharmacy
    Spring 2016
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    American
    pharmacy comes
    from roots in
    modest English
    shops as well as
    wholesalers
    (druggists) &
    general stores
    England, 1804
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v 1638: John Johnstone (in future New Jersey), a Scottish apothecary
    founded a settlement there.
    v 1653: Gysbert van Imbroch (in future New York), a Dutch
    surgeon, who practiced medicine and sold drugs in a general store;
    may have operated the first “drug store” in North America as part of
    a multi-purpose dispensary.
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v New England
    • 1630: Boston is founded and Governor John Winthrop and his son
    took an avid interest in preparing medicines; they employed a trained
    British apothecary, Robert Cooke, to assist them, importing herbs
    from Europe; the younger Winthrop also prepared compounds from
    saltpeter, antimony, mercury, tartar, sulfur, and iron and became one
    of the first people in North America to prepare pharmaceuticals.
    • 1646: The first mention of a dispensary in British North America
    operated by William Davis of Boston.
    • Elizabeth Gooking Greenleaf (1681–1762), the first woman to
    practice as an apothecary during the colonial era; in 1727, she opened
    an apothecary shop with her husband in Boston.
    Very few apothecary shops in Colonial America
    Governor John Winthrop by Robert Thom, Parke-Davis series
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v 1729: Irish immigrant Christopher Marshall established an apothecary
    shop in Philadelphia, which ultimately manufactured pharmaceuticals,
    served as a drug wholesaler (druggist) to physicians and large landholders,
    and trained apothecaries; during the American Revolution, he supplied
    medicines to the American troops under General George Washington; in
    1805, his daughter Elizabeth became the first American woman
    apothecary; in 1821, his son Charles became the first president of the
    Philadelphia College of Pharmacy.
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Apothecary (Physician or Pharmacist)-a preparer and compounder
    of medicinal products
    v Pharmacist /Druggist (Pharmacist Owner)
    v Drug Clerk (Employee Pharmacist)
    v Materia Medica-a collection of the therapeutic properties of
    medicine (pharmacology)
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Health practitioners were few among early settlers
    v “Heroic Medicine” (Dr. Benjamin Rush)
    v Home remedies, home medical books
    v Physician-run apothecary shops
    v Druggists
    • Wholesale medicines
    • Patent medicines (nostrums)
    • Luden’s Cough Drops, Fletcher’s Castoria (now Laxative)
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Almost all medicines imported from England
    v Revolutionary War led to development of domestic sources of
    medicine
    • Growing up in Connecticut, Benedict Arnold trained as an
    apothecary in Norwich; starting in 1764, he owned and operated a
    drugstore in New Haven.
    v Most compounding occurred in physician’s offices; number of
    non-physician pharmacy practitioners was small
    Benedict Arnold,
    Apothecary,
    c. 1765, New Haven
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v 18th and Early 19th Century Drugs
    • Anodynes (pain relievers): opium and laudanum (opium, saffron, and Canary wine)
    • Anti-arthritics: Epsom salt or cinchona
    • Anti-dysentery: ipecac, paregoric
    • Anti-pyretics (for fever): emetics, cinchona, laxatives, and cold baths
    • Emetics (to induce vomiting to treat food poisoning): tartar emetic, ipecac, honey
    • Muscle spasms: opium, wine, cinchona, and oil of amber
    • Intestinal irritation: purgatives or cathartics including Glauber’s Salts, Plummer’s Pills,
    ipecac, jalap, calomel, salme, rhubarb, castor oil, and Epsom salts
    • Sudorifics or diaphoretics (to induce perspiration): camphor, Dover’s Powder (opium
    and ipecac), and rhubarb
    • Diuretics (to treat edema by increasing urine flow): milk, extracts of dandelions, juniper
    berries, and lemon juice
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Hospital Pharmacy
    • Dr. Thomas Bond and Benjamin Franklin established Pennsylvania
    Hospital in 1751 in Philadelphia, North America’s first hospital.
    • 1752: Jonathan Roberts, America’s first hospital “pharmacist”; like most
    early hospital pharmacists (including at the Massachusetts General
    Hospital) he was an apprentice physician
    • Roberts’ successor proposed separating pharmacy practice from medical
    practice.
    • By 1811, the New York Hospital employed a full-time pharmaceutical
    practitioner.
    • Most 19th century (and before) patients were treated at home, limiting the
    need for hospital pharmacists.
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Hospital Pharmacy
    • The demand for hospital pharmacists increased during the Civil War;
    these individuals had expertise in drug preparation manufacturing
    and in buying drugs.
    • With an increase in immigration to the U.S. after the Civil War,
    demand for hospitals also increased to meet the expanding
    population; the growth in the number of hospitals also led to an
    increased demand for hospital pharmacists as hospitals realized it was
    more cost-effective to fill prescription in-house rather than use
    community pharmacies.
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Early 1800s: formal instruction in medical schools versus
    apprenticeship model
    v Physicians began to write prescriptions for apothecaries to
    compound and dispense leading to a growth in pharmacy
    v 1808: Massachusetts Pharmacopoeia
    v 1820: Pharmacopoeia of the United States of America
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v First two schools of pharmacy established
    • Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (1821)
    • Massachusetts College of Pharmacy (1823)
    v In the 1830s, physicians generally supported the emergence of
    pharmacy and establishment of pharmacy schools.
    v Establishment of the American pharmaceutical industry
    v Potent drugs were added to the materia medica
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Between 1820 and 1860, the practice of pharmacy emerged from
    the practice of medicine
    • Apothecary shops became more standardized in the stock they
    carried; patent medicines became very profitable






    Drugs and medicines
    Surgical supplies
    Artificial teeth and limbs
    Dyestuffs
    Essences
    Chemicals
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v By the 1840s, tensions grew between physicians and pharmacists
    • The focus of pharmacists shifted to directly caring for patients
    versus doing the bidding of physicians.
    • Apothecaries began to fill prescriptions without physician
    authorization.
    • Medical schools increased the number of graduates, many of whom
    wanted to practice in cities, leading to a direct conflict with
    pharmacists in their care of patients.
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Inferior drug products being shipped from Europe becomes an
    even more serious problem in the 1840s
    • Increased regulation of the European drug market
    • Alkaloidal chemistry allowed for extraction of the active ingredient
    from the plan (unfortunately, these plants were often sent to America
    absent the active drug)
    • Drug Importation Act of 1848—established examiners at several
    points of entry to check quality, purity and fitness
    E A R LY P H A R M AC Y I N A M E R I C A
    v Although initially successful, the Drug Importation Act of 1848
    eventually failed because of the appointment of incompetent
    inspectors (as a result of political cronyism); the failure of this law led
    to a convention of pharmacists in NYC in 1851, which ultimately led
    to calls for a national pharmacy organization (APhA).
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    Source: American Pharmacists Association.
    PHRE 5345 Pharmacists, Pharmaceuticals, and the Media
    ONLINE ANALYTICAL DISCUSSION INFORMATION
    Participation Guidelines
    You are expected to participate actively in the scheduled online analytical discussions. In order to do this, you must create a substantive post for
    each of the four (4) assigned discussion topics by the deadline. Each post should demonstrate your achievement of the participation criteria. In
    addition, you should respond to the postings of at least two of your fellow learners for each discussion question (unless the discussion instructions
    state otherwise). These responses to other learners should be substantive posts that contribute to the conversation by asking questions, respectfully
    debating positions, and presenting supporting information relevant to the topic. Also, it is your responsibility to respond to any follow-up
    questions the instructor directs to you in the Discussion area of Blackboard in a timely matter (within 24 hours).
    In order to permit other learners time to respond, you must submit your initial posts in the Discussion area by Tuesday at 23:55 (11:55 pm
    EDT) (just before midnight). Responses to other learners’ posts are due by the following Friday (last day of each segment) at 23:55 EDT.
    Timeline for Analytical Discussion Posts
    Sunday
    Monday
    Tuesday
    Wednesday Thursday
    Friday
    Weekly Discussion Schedule
    Segment
    Begins
    Read,
    reflect,
    research,
    and write
    Initial
    Discussion
    Post due
    Engage and
    respond with
    classmates
    ALL
    Responses
    DUE
    Segment
    Ends
    Online Analytical Discussion Scoring Rubric
    Due Date: Weeks one, two, four, and six
    Percentage of Course Grade: 30%
    {see next page}
    Saturday
    2
    PHRE 5345 Online Analytical Discussion Grading Rubric
    Proficient
    (2 points)
    Distinguished
    (3 points)
    Learner does not post
    Learner responds to fewer
    responses to fellow learners. than the minimum number
    of request posts to fellow
    learners.
    Learner responds to the
    requisite number of posts
    to fellow learners and
    sometimes posts more than
    the requirements.
    Learner consistently
    responds to more than the
    requisite number of posts
    to fellow learners.
    Quality in Completeness: Responses
    address all aspects of the question.
    Responses do not address the Responses do not
    question or are not relevant consistently address all
    to the discussion prompts.
    aspects of the question.
    Responses address all
    aspects of the question.
    Responses address all
    aspects of the question and
    extend the dialog.
    3
    Quality in Critical Thinking: Responses
    show evidence of critical thinking.
    Responses do not
    demonstrate evidence of
    critical thinking.
    Responses show evidence
    of critical thinking.
    Responses show evidence
    of critical thinking at a
    high level.
    4
    Quality in Peer-to-Peer Interaction:
    Responses to other learners include
    substantive feedback that extends the
    discussion by raising questions and sharing
    additional resource information when
    appropriate. Learner often responds to
    feedback received from other learners, as
    appropriate.
    Learner rarely or never posts Responses to other
    feedback to other learners.
    learners seldom include
    substantive feedback that
    extends the discussion.
    Learner occasionally
    responds to feedback
    received from other
    learners.
    Responses to other
    learners include
    substantive feedback that
    extends the discussion by
    raising questions and
    sharing additional resource
    information, when
    appropriate. Learner often
    responds to feedback
    received from other
    learners, as appropriate.
    Responses to other
    learners are insightful and
    provide substantive
    feedback that extends the
    discussion by consistently
    raising new questions,
    fosters critical thinking,
    and leads to the refinement
    of ideas. Learner responds
    to feedback received from
    other learners, as
    appropriate, and continues
    the dialog.
    5
    Quality in Use of Discussion Guidelines
    (in syllabus): Responses show evidence of
    analysis and synthesis to create a strong,
    substantive post that states the case and
    supports the evaluation with evidence as
    needed.
    Responses do not follow any Responses show minimal
    of the discussion guidelines. analysis and synthesis to
    create a strong post that
    partially states the case
    and contains minimal
    evidence.
    Responses show evidence
    of analysis and synthesis
    to create a strong,
    substantive post that states
    the case and supports the
    evaluation with evidence.
    Responses show evidence
    of analysis and synthesis
    to create a strong,
    substantive discussion post
    that states the full case,
    supports the evaluation
    with evidence, and raises
    new questions or describes
    what remains unanswered.
    #
    Criterion
    1
    Participation Responsiveness: Learner
    responds to the requisite number of posts to
    fellow learners and sometimes posts more
    than the requirements.
    2
    Non-performance
    (0 points)
    Basic
    (1 point)
    Responses show minimal
    evidence of critical
    thinking.
    TOTAL => 15 Points

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