Pharmacy has existed for thousands of years, dating back to ancient times when religious figures and healers would treat illnesses. Over many centuries, the roles of pharmacist and physician separated and specialized. Key developments included the establishment of the first apothecary shops run separately from medicine during the Arabian era, the creation of the first official pharmacopoeia in 15th century Italy, and the founding of the first pharmacy school and association in the United States in the 18th-19th centuries. Modern pharmacy incorporates scientific advances and large-scale manufacturing to continue its tradition of developing and providing effective drugs to patients.
Pharmacy has existed for thousands of years, dating back to ancient times when religious figures and healers would treat illnesses. Over many centuries, the roles of pharmacist and physician separated and specialized. Key developments included the establishment of the first apothecary shops run separately from medicine during the Arabian era, the creation of the first official pharmacopoeia in 15th century Italy, and the founding of the first pharmacy school and association in the United States in the 18th-19th centuries. Modern pharmacy incorporates scientific advances and large-scale manufacturing to continue its tradition of developing and providing effective drugs to patients.
Pharmacy has existed for thousands of years, dating back to ancient times when religious figures and healers would treat illnesses. Over many centuries, the roles of pharmacist and physician separated and specialized. Key developments included the establishment of the first apothecary shops run separately from medicine during the Arabian era, the creation of the first official pharmacopoeia in 15th century Italy, and the founding of the first pharmacy school and association in the United States in the 18th-19th centuries. Modern pharmacy incorporates scientific advances and large-scale manufacturing to continue its tradition of developing and providing effective drugs to patients.
Pharmacy has existed for thousands of years, dating back to ancient times when religious figures and healers would treat illnesses. Over many centuries, the roles of pharmacist and physician separated and specialized. Key developments included the establishment of the first apothecary shops run separately from medicine during the Arabian era, the creation of the first official pharmacopoeia in 15th century Italy, and the founding of the first pharmacy school and association in the United States in the 18th-19th centuries. Modern pharmacy incorporates scientific advances and large-scale manufacturing to continue its tradition of developing and providing effective drugs to patients.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 20
History of Pharmacy
1. BEFORE THE DAWN
OF HISTORY Pharmacy has been inseparable from mankind’s history. The history of preparation and use of medicines dates back to ancient times.
Ancient man learned from instinct, from observation of
birds and beasts. Cool water, a leaf, dirt, or mud was his first soothing application.
Eventually, he applied his knowledge for the benefit of
others. HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF PHARMACY
In ancient times, diseases were thought to
be produced by evil forces or by a God’s anger.
Thus, religious persons or magicians were
found to be associated with the treatment of patients. So called super-natural activities and / or religious rituals always accompanied with the drug treatment.
On their earliest times, the practice of
pharmacy and medicine were indistinguishable. 2. PHARMACY IN ANCIENT BABYLONIA
Babylon, jewel of ancient Mesopotamia, often called the
cradle of civilization, provides the earliest known record of practice of the art of the apothecary.
Practitioners of healing of this era (about 2600 B.C.) were
priest, pharmacist and physician, all in one.
Medical texts on clay tablets record first the symptoms of
illness, the prescription and directions for compounding, then a prayer to the gods asking help. 3. PHARMACY IN ANCIENT CHINA
Chinese Pharmacy, according to legend, stems from Shen
Nung (about 2000 B.C.), emperor who sought out and investigated the medicinal value of several hundred herbs.
He reputed to have tested many of them on himself, and to
have written the first Pen T-Sao, or native herbal, recording 365 drugs. 4. DAYS OF THE PAPYRUS EBERS
Though Egyptian medicine dates from about 2900 B.C., best
known and most important pharmaceutical record is the "Papyrus Ebers" (1500 B.C.), a collection of 800 prescriptions, mentioning 700 drugs.
Pharmacy in ancient Egypt was conducted by two or more
echelons (level in hierarchy) : gatherers and preparers of drugs, and "chiefs of fabrication," or head pharmacists. 5. THEOPHRASTUS - FATHER OF BOTANY
Theophrastus (about 300 B.C.), among the greatest early
Greek philosophers and natural scientists, is called the "father of botany."
His observations and writings dealing with the medical
qualities and peculiarities of herbs are unusually accurate, even in the light of present knowledge. 6. GALEN - EXPERIMENTER IN DRUG COMPOUNDING
Galen was well-known and highly honored among
both the professions of Pharmacy and Medicine.
Galen (130-200 A.D.) practiced and taught both
Pharmacy and Medicine in Rome; his principles of preparing and compounding medicines ruled in the Western world for 1,500 years.
He was the originator of the formula for a cold
cream, essentially similar to that known today. 7. THE FIRST APOTHECARY SHOPS
The Arabs separated the arts of apothecary and physician,
establishing in Bagdad late in the eighth century the first privately owned drug stores.
They preserved much of the Greco-Roman wisdom, added to it,
developing with the aid of their natural resources syrups, distilled waters and alcoholic liquids. 8. AVICENNA - THE "PERSIAN GALEN"
Among the brilliant contributors to the sciences of Pharmacy and
Medicine during the Arabian era was one genius who seems to stand for his time - the Persian, Ibn Sina (about 980-1037 A.D.), called Avicenna by the Western world.
Pharmacist, poet, physician, philosopher and diplomat, Avicenna
was an intellectual giant, a favorite of Persian princes and rulers.
His pharmaceutical teachings were accepted as authority in the
West until the 17th century; and still are dominant influences in the Orient. 9. SEPARATION OF PHARMACY AND MEDICINE
In European countries exposed to Arabian
influence, public pharmacies began to appear in the 17th century. However, it was not until about 1240 A.D. that, in Sicily and southern Italy, Pharmacy was separated from Medicine. Frederick II of Hohenstaufen was Emperor of Germany as well as King of Sicily. At his palace in Palermo, he presented subject Pharmacists with the first European edict completely separating their responsibilities from those of Medicine, and prescribing regulations for their professional practice. 10. THE FIRST OFFICIAL PHARMACOPOEIA
The idea of a pharmacopoeia with official
status, to be followed by all apothecaries, originated in Florence.
The Nuovo Receptario, originally written
in Italian, was published and became the legal standard for the city-state in 1498. 11. FIRST HOSPITAL IN COLONIAL AMERICA
Colonial America's first hospital (Pennsylvania) was
established in Philadelphia in 1751; the first Hospital Pharmacy began operations there in 1752.
First Hospital Pharmacist was Jonathan Roberts.
His successor, John Morgan, whose practice as a hospital
pharmacist (1755-56), and whose impact upon Pharmacy and Medicine influenced the development of professional pharmacy in North America. 12. AMERICAN PHARMACY BUILDS ITS FOUNDATIONS
Faced with two major threats; deterioration of the
practice of pharmacy, and a discriminatory classification by the University of Pennsylvania medical faculty, the pharmacists of Philadelphia held a protest meeting in Carpenters' Hall, February 23, 1821.
At a second meeting, March 13, the pharmacists voted for
formation of an association, which became The Philadelphia College of Pharmacy; a school of pharmacy; and a self-policing board. 13. THE FATHER OF AMERICAN PHARMACY
William Procter, Jr., graduated from The Philadelphia
College of Pharmacy in 1837; operated a retail pharmacy; served the College as Professor of Pharmacy for 20 years.
He was a leader in founding The American
Pharmaceutical Association; served that organization as its first secretary; later, as its president; served 30 years on the U.S.P. Revision Committee; was for 22 years Editor of the American Journal of Pharmacy. 14. A REVOLUTION IN PHARMACEUTICAL EDUCATION
Dr. Albert B. Prescott launched the pharmacy
course at the University of Michigan in 1868,
However, the Michigan course pioneered other
major changes: laboratory pharmacy, a definite curriculum that included basic sciences, and a program that demanded students' full-time attention. 15. THE PHARMACOPOEIA COMES OF AGE
The first "United States Pharmacopoeia" (1820) was the
work of the medical profession.
It was the first book of drug standards from a professional
source to have achieved a nation's acceptance.
In 1877, Pharmacists formed a "Committee on Revision"
chairmanned by hospital pharmacist Charles Rice, assisted by pharmacist-educator Joseph P. Remington, and by Dr. Squibb, their indefatigable collaborator. 16. PHARMACEUTICAL MANUFACTURING COMES OF AGE
Pharmaceutical manufacturing as an industry apart from retail
Pharmacy had its beginnings about 1600; really got under way in the middle 1700's.
It developed first in Germany, then in England and in France.
In America, it was the child of wars - born in the Revolution; grew
rapidly during and following the Civil War; became independent of Europe during World War I; came of age during and following World War II.
Utilizing latest technical advances from every branch of science,
manufacturing Pharmacy economically develops and produces the latest and greatest in drugs in immense quantities. 17. THE ERA OF ANTIBIOTICS
Antibiotics are not new. Their actions probably were first observed by Pasteur in 1877.
However, the second quarter of the 20th century marked the flowering of the antibiotic era
Fleming's discovery of penicillin in 1929 went undeveloped and
Florey and Chain studied it in 1940.
Under pressure of World War II, the pharmaceutical manufacturers
rapidly adapted mass production methods to penicillin.
Intensive research continues to find antibiotics that will conquer more
of men's microbial enemies. 18. PHARMACY TODAY AND TOMORROW
Pharmacy, with its heritage of 50 centuries of service to mankind, has
come to be recognized as of the great professions.
Pharmacists are among the community's finest educated people.
When today's retail pharmacist fills a prescription written by a
physician, he provides a professional service incorporating the benefits of the work of pharmacists in all branches of the profession - education, research, development, standards, production, and distribution.
Pharmacy's professional stature will continue to grow in the future as
this great heritage and tradition of service is passed on from preceptor to apprentice, from teacher to student, from father to son.