Week 3 reflection - Science
Week #3 ReflectionPharmacopeiaPlease read, view, and reflect on the following materials:Dr. Robert McCarthy PowerPoint (McCarthy-8-Pharmacoepiea attached document) IndustryPlease read, view, and reflect on the following materials:Dr. Don Vogt and Dr. Michael Montagne Articles֎ Process of Pharmaceutical Development: I available at the following URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249017438_The_Process_of_Drug_Development_I_The_Historical_Interplay_of_Political_Economics_Research_and_Regulation (Links to an external site.)֎ Process of Pharmaceutical Development: II available at the following URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240534302_The_Process_of_Drug_Development_II_The_Historical_Interplay_of_Therapeutics_Clinical_Research_and_Scientific_Education (Links to an external site.)Dr. Robert McCarthy PowerPoint (McCarthy-5-Industry attached document) AIHP PowerPoint (AIHP-PharmaceuticalIndustry attached document) Reflection instructions can be found below. Reflect on the content assigned for Week #3 using the below questions as a guide, at a minimum:How important was establishing drug standards to the evolution of pharmacy as a profession?The USP is celebrating its bicentennial in 2020. How relevant is it today?What made you curious about this weeks content?As the American pharmaceutical industry matured, what has been the primary positive things that have occurred? What have been the most negative things?Please use 12-point, Times New Roman font with 1.5 or 2.0 spacing. Thank you.Minimun 2 pages of reflection. At least 3 cited sources.
reflection_instructions_week_3.docx
aihp_pharmaceuticalindustry.pptx
mccarthy_5_industry.pdf
mccarthy_8_pharmacoepeia.pdf
grading_rubric.pdf
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Week #3 Reflection
Pharmacopeia
Please read, view, and reflect on the following materials:
Dr. Robert McCarthy PowerPoint (McCarthy-8-Pharmacoepiea attached
document)
Industry
Please read, view, and reflect on the following materials:
•
Dr. Don Vogt and Dr. Michael Montagne Articles
֎ Process of Pharmaceutical Development: I available at the following
URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249017438_The_Process_of_Drug_Develop
ment_I_The_Historical_Interplay_of_Political_Economics_Research_and_Regulation (Links
to an external site.)
֎ Process of Pharmaceutical Development: II available at the following
URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240534302_The_Process_of_Drug_Develop
ment_II_The_Historical_Interplay_of_Therapeutics_Clinical_Research_and_Scientific_Educ
ation (Links to an external site.)
•
Dr. Robert McCarthy PowerPoint (McCarthy-5-Industry attached
document)
• AIHP PowerPoint (AIHP-PharmaceuticalIndustry attached document)
Reflection instructions can be found below.
Reflect on the content assigned for Week #3 using the below questions as a guide, at a
minimum:
o
o
o
o
o
How important was establishing drug standards to the evolution of pharmacy as
a profession?
The USP is celebrating its bicentennial in 2020. How relevant is it today?
What made you curious about this weeks content?
As the American pharmaceutical industry matured, what has been the primary
positive things that have occurred? What have been the most negative things?
What impact has the maturation of the pharmaceutical industry had on health
care in the United States?
o
Are there parallels between the late 1910s and today (100 + years later)?
Teaching History of Pharmacy
According to the AIHP
Guidelines:
E. Growth of the
Pharmaceutical Industry
Created by: Karen Nagel-Edwards,
PhD
Midwestern University Chicago College of
Pharmacy
Reviewed by: Patricia Jusczak,
BS Pharm
University of Hawaii at Hilo, The
Daniel K. Inouye College of Pharmacy
Developed by the Teaching History of Pharmacy Committee
of the History of Pharmacy SIG, 2017-18
Picture: Pharmacist at People’s Drug Store No. 5, Washington, DC, c. 1920. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs, LC-USZ62-129891
Italy
• Earliest European development of
chemical industry
– 1294 – Venice
– Venetian treacle was an important export
– Monasteries got involved in industrial
pharmaceutical activity (Florence)
• Distilled waters
• Cosmetics
th
17
and
th
18
Century
• The first pharmaceutical manufacturing
in England began with The Society of
the Art and Mystery of the
Apothecaries of the City of London
– In 1623, the Society established a
cooperative of apothecaries who agreed to
produce Galenicals and chemicals on a
large scale
th
17
and
th
18
Century
• Robert Boyle (father of modern
chemistry) and Ambrosius Gotfried
Hanckwitz (Godfrey)
– Built chemist’s shop with laboratory in
London
– Godfrey later transformed shop into
world’s leading producer of phosphorus
– Also prepared several chemicals and
Galenicals
th
17
and
th
18
Century
• Robert Boyle (father of modern
chemistry) and Ambrosius Gotfried
Hanckwitz (Godfrey)
– Built chemist’s shop with laboratory in
London
– Godfrey later transformed shop into
world’s leading producer of phosphorus
– Also prepared several chemicals and
Galenicals
th
17
and
th
18
Century
• Antoine Baume
– 1728-1804
– French chemist and pharmacist
•
•
•
•
One of first in France to manufacture
chemicals and Galenicals in large scale
Transformed his shop into a manufacturing
plant
Inventor of a number of technical
improvements to laboratory equipment
Over 2400 products on his 1775 price list
th
17
and
th
18
Century
• 1698: first drug patent
– Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate
heptahydrate)
Revolutionary War Era
• Continental Congress resolution (1775)
– Established an Army Hospital
– Staff included:
•
•
•
•
Director-general and chief physician
4 surgeons
1 apothecary
20 mates
• Resolution reorganizing the medical
department (1777)
– Apothecaries roles restricted to pharmaceutical
ones
Andrew Craigie
– 1754-1819
– Appointed Apothecary
General of all US military
districts during American
Revolution
• Rank of Lieutenant Colonel
• Accompanied physicians to
battle
• Apothecary job description
separate and distinct from
physician
http://www.buyorkney.com/roots/biographies/img/andrew_craigie_jr.jpg
Andrew Craigie
– Role as Apothecary General:
• Receive, prepare and deliver drugs (and
instruments and shop furniture) to the army
• Created and supervised large-scale
compounding / chemical warehouse, the
Elaboratory, to fill and deliver medicine chests
to military hospitals and battlefields
– Sets precedent for pharmacists to gain
professional recognition
– After war, became Apothecary General of
the US
Andrew Craigie 1st Apothecary General (17751783) at the Battle of Bunker Hill
Revolutionary War Era
• Main concerns with military drug supply
– Drug shortages
– Market speculations
– Uncertain transport
Methods of Treatment and Drugs
Used During the Revolution
• Antiseptic: Mercury (metals and salts)
• Pain: Laudanum (a tincture of opium, saffron & Canary
wine)
• Laxative: Mercurous chloride (calomel), Glauber’s salt
(sodium sulfate)
• Syphilis: Larger doses of mercurous chloride
• Malaria: Jesuits Bark (cinchona contains quinine)
• Heart conditions: Digitalis
• Bloodletting: Still used from Hippocratic times
• Purging: Botanicals, emetics, jalap, ipecac, rhubarb
• Amputation – 70\% were fatal
There were no thermometers, stethoscopes, hypodermic
syringes
Drugs in the Medicine Chests
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Calomel
Epsom salts
Peruvian bark (cinchona)
Tartar emetic
Opium or Paregoric Elixir
Jalap
Rhubarb
Glauber’s Salts
European and Local Herbs
Medicine Chest early 1800’s
Where did the drugs come from?
• Bought drugs from apothecaries
– Not enough for the growing military need
– British blockade, prices skyrocketed
– Marshall Apothecary*, Andrew Craigie’s
warehouse
• Shipped chests of drugs to various army
districts
Where did the drugs come from?
• Loyalists indifferent to the cause
– Patriot pharmacies loyal to the cause faced
losing everything
• Loyalist Brits and their physicians
poisoned supplies left behind as
Continental Army moved in to Boston
– Mixed in arsenic
Where did the drugs come from?
• Privateers captures British ships and
drugs (best source)
– Captured over 1000 ships – prices went
higher
• Jamaica and Bermuda, brought drugs to
Philadelphia
– Quality was scanty, other countries were
unreliable
– Eventually supplied on a regular basis
Christopher Marshall and the
Marshall Apothecary
• 1709-1707
• Irish immigrant; trained in England
• Opened apothecary shop in Philadelphia
in 1729
– Remained open until 1825
• Highly respected; apprentices wanted to
train with him
Christopher Marshall and the
Marshall Apothecary
• Sons Christopher Jr. (1740-1806) and
Charles (1744-1825) were partners in the
business
– Charles became first president of
Philadelphia College of Pharmacy; his
granddaughter Elizabeth became the first
US female pharmacist
Christopher Marshall and the
Marshall Apothecary
• Key role in the American Revolution
– Supplied medicine to George Washington’s
troops
– Manufactured chemicals and medicine
chests
• Advertised with sign:
– “We fill prescriptions according to the
wishes of your physician”
Marshall Apothecary 1729-1825
Christopher Marshall with sons, Christopher Jr. and Charles
Revolutionary War Era
• Lititz Pharmacopoeia
–
–
–
–
Military formulary of 1778
Small booklet
Contained simple yet efficacious remedies
Illustrates:
• Choice of items based on medical knowledge of
the time (esp. British knowledge)
• Results of the American experience
• Difficulties arising from being a nation at war
Revolutionary War Era
• Lititz Pharmacopoeia
– Because of the drug shortage
• Permitted official substitution of therapeutically
equivalent substances for drugs in uncertain
supply
Lititz Pharmacopoeia
http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/etexts/medicine/images/thumbnails/rs141-2-b8_00001.jpg
Revolutionary War Era
• Coste’s Compendium
– Compiled for French medical hospitals in
America
– Jean-Francois Coste
• Chief physician to the French Army serving
with the colonists
Revolutionary War Era
•
Importance of Revolution to Pharmacy
1. 8 years of separate but equal status as a
profession apart from medicine
2. First known large-scale manufacture of
pharmaceuticals on American soil
3. First practical attempt at a uniform
formulary as a basis for satisfactory and
reliable work
Benedict Arnold
• c. 1741 – 1801
• General during the American
Revolution
– First for the American Continental Army
– Defected to the British after plot to
surrender West Point exposed
– Name largely synonymous with treason in
the United States
Benedict Arnold
• But before all that…
– 1762: pharmacist and bookseller in New
Haven, CT
– Began trading in the West Indies
• Sister Hannah managed the apothecary in his
absence
• Became smuggler by default by ignoring the
Stamp Act
th
19
Century
• Industrial Revolution accentuated
diminution of the age old paradigm of
the apothecary compounding
individual prescriptions by hand
th
19
Century
• Era of alkaloids and phytochemistry
– Roots of modern pharmaceutical
chemistry
– Discovery of alkaloids such as morphine
and quinine catalyzed the need for large
scale production
th
19
Century
• Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Sertürner
– 1783-1841
– German pharmacist
– First to isolate morphine from opium
(1804)
• Published paper on its isolation,
crystallization, crystal structure, and
pharmacological properties (in stray dogs,
then self-experiments)
th
19
Century
• 1822: Pierre-Joseph Pelletier
opened an industrial plant for
quinine manufacturing in France
• 1823: Rosengarten & Sons
produced and sold quinine in
Philadelphia
th
19
Century
• Joseph Bienaimé Caventou
–
–
–
–
1795-1877
French pharmacist and professor
Collaborated with Pelletier
Pioneer in the use of mild solvents to
isolate a number of active ingredients
from plants, particularly alkaloids
Most Modern Pharmaceutical Companies
Have Roots in the 19th Century
Pharmaceutical Company
Year of Foundation
H.E. Merck, Germany
1827
Pfizer
1849
E.R. Squibb & Sons, US
1858
Wyeth, US
1860
Bayer AG, Germany
1863
Burroughs, Wellcome & Company, England
1880
Eli Lily, US
1876
Johnson & Johnson, US
1885
Bristol-Myers, US
1887
Abott Laboratories, US
1888
Merck & Companies, US
1891
F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG, Switzerland
1896
35
th
19
Century
• HE Merck
– 1827
– Began manufacturing and selling various
alkaloids in Germany
– Later opened a pharmaceutical plant in
the US in 1891
th
19
Century
• Friedrich Bayer
– 1825-1880
– 1863: Founded Bayer AG in
Germany
• Began as a dyestuff factory
th
19
Century
– 1897: Bayer chemists
synthesized pure acetyl
salicylic acid
• Had previously been
synthesized in an impure form
by French chemist Frédéric
Gerhardt (1816-1856)
– 1899: filed aspirin
trademark worldwide
th
19
Century
• Thomas Beecham
– 1820-1907
– 1842: marketed Beecham’s Pills
(laxative)
• Contained aloe, ginger and soap with some
minor ingredients
– 1859: Beecham’s opened first factory for
rapid production in Lancashire, England
• Mergers → SmithKline Beecham →
GlaxoSmithKline
Philadelphia: Birthplace of
American Pharmaceutical Industry
• 1823: Rosengarten & Sons produced
and sold quinine in Philadelphia
– Also produced morphine salts and other
alkaloids
• 1826: Samuel Wetherill began
manufacturing various chemicals and
alkaloids
Philadelphia: Birthplace of
American Pharmaceutical Industry
• 1841: John K. Smith established a
pharmaceutical factory with his
accountant, Mahlon Kline
• 1856: William Warner invented and
began manufacturing the sugar-coated
pill
Philadelphia: Birthplace of
American Pharmaceutical Industry
• 1860: John (1834–1907) and
Frank Wyeth found Wyeth and
Brother
– 1872: Henry Bowers developed
first rotary compressed tablet
machine in US
– Name changes over time:
American Home Products → Wyeth
→ acquired by Pfizer in 2009
• .
Expansion of US Pharmaceutical
Industry in the 19th Century
• 1849: Pfizer founded in New York
City
– Charles Pfizer and Charles F. Erhart
– First product: palatable form of santonin
(antiparasitic)
Expansion of US Pharmaceutical
Industry in the 19th Century
• 1855: Frederick Stearns and Company
established in Detroit
– Specialized in fluid extracts
– Stated listing the names of the ingredients
in the preparations before it was required
by the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906
The Role of War on the
Pharmaceutical Industry
• Accentuated need for mass production
of good-quality pharmaceuticals
• 1846-1848: Mexican American War
– Resulted in significantly higher casualties
off the battlefield
• In part caused by import of fake or
adulterated drugs
• Led to passage of first pharmaceutical
regulation, the 1848 Drug Import Law
• .
Expansion of US Pharmaceutical
Industry in the 19th Century
• 1858: Squibb founded in Brooklyn,
NY by Edward R. Squibb
– Enlisted as a navy doctor during the
Mexican American War
– Frustrated by poor drug quality and spent
career working to combat adulteration
The Age of Quackery
Compounded products you won’t
see prescribed today
• Blue mass pills
– Staple in 1850’s for melancholy
– Contained:
• Mercury (375 mcg)
– Safe daily dose = 21 mcg
•
•
•
•
Honey
Rose water
Licorice root
Rose petals
The Age of Quackery
Compounded products you won’t
see prescribed today
• Blue mass pills
– Known to be taken by Abraham Lincoln
– Probably explain outbursts of rage and
bizarre behavior
• Lincoln-Douglas debate, 1858
• Shook Orlando Ficklin and lifted him out of
his seat
• Realized it was the pills; never took them
again
Age of Quackery
Patent Medicines
• Age of quackery
– 1880s:
• Very popular sales items
• Ingredients kept secret until 1906 Federal
legislation
• Few were actually patented
• Claims were often sensational and
exaggerated
• Sometimes effective, but often dangerous
Age of Quackery
Patent Medicines
• Many of these drugs developed out of
the custom of pharmacists producing
and marketing their own remedies
– Largely vegetable drugs
• Contained iron oxide
and magnesium sulfate
• Mostly laudanum
• Liniment for rheumatic pain
• Also advertised for:
– pneumonia, cancer, diphtheria,
earache, toothache, headache and
hydrophobia
• Contained:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
50-70\% alcohol
Camphor
Ammonia
Chloroform
Sassafras
Cloves
Turpentine
• Could taken internally or used
topically
Civilian Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• Most crude drugs were imported
– Sold to wholesalers or large drug
companies
– Finished medicines were distributed to
retail pharmacists and physicians for sale
to the public
Civilian Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• Challenges:
–
–
–
–
Volatile prices due to speculators
Drug adulteration
Lack of formal pharmacy education
Most crude drug was imported to the
Northern states – problem for those living
in the Confederacy
Military Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• 4 major stages of drug supply during
the war, all of which involved
pharmacists:
1. Acquisition of materials
2. Inspection and preparation of finished
medicines
3. Distribution to depots and hospitals
4. Dispensing to patients
Military Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• Pre-war:
– US Army bought medicine on the open
market
– Distributed through a large depot in New
York, plus some smaller depots
Military Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• During war (in the North):
– Expanded to 30 depots
• Major centers in New York and Philadelphia
• Relied heavily on handful of domestic drug
companies for stable inventories and prices
– In field, medical purveyors:
• Requisitioned medicines
• Distributed to units
Military Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• During war (in the South):
– Acquisition hampered by blockade
– Southern drugstore stock was quickly used
up
– What to do?
•
•
•
•
Blockade running
Smuggling through enemy lines
Capture of Union supplies
Use of native plants and remedies
Military Pharmacy during the
Civil War Period
• Both sides established laboratories to:
– Inspect raw drug material
– Prepare finished medicines
– Union labs:
• Philadelphia, Long Island, Brooklyn, St. Louis
– Confederate labs:
• Richmond, plus labs in Alabama, Georgia, North
and South Carolina, Arkansas, and Texas
Battlefield Drugstore
http://www.drugstoremuseum.com/images/level_imgs/65498419851.jpg
Need for Standards
Patent medicines and adulterated
drugs during the Civil War
contributed greatly to the need for
standards
Charles Rice
• 1841-1901
– Received compounding training in the Navy
– Subsequently began work at Bellevue Hospital in
NYC
• Lived there most of his life
– Outspoken about need for compounding and
dispensing standards
• Creator of modern day pharmacopeia
• Also instrumental in creating National Formulary
• USP/NF (unified in 1975) is the official compendium
of drug standards in the US
United States Pharmacopeia
• Designed to bring uniformity to the
materia medica and pharmacy
preparations of the day
– First published in 1820
– Initial work (first and second revisions)
was done by physicians
– USP Convention in 1840 involved
pharmacists as well
– Physicians lost interest by 1870
United States Pharmacopeia
• First Edition – what sort of formulas
did it contain?
Edward Robinson Squibb
• 1819-1900
– Advocate of product standards
• Quality more important than
lowest price
• Ether – steam process of
production led to more
standardized, efficacious
product
– Refused to patent process
– Published for others to use
Edward Robinson Squibb
– Went on to form pharmaceutical
company in 1858
• Initial lab was destroyed by fire when a lab
assistant dropped a bottle of ether
• Rebuilt; lab assistant was retained (and
promoted!)
• Saw tremendous growth
– Sold ether with excellent reputation for quality
– Civil War increased demand for products
Edward Robinson Squibb
– Post-war: increased attention on substandard
and adulterated medicines
– 1876 APhA meeting: led debate on the future
of the USP
• Need for more frequent revision
• Increased discussion of monographs
• Correction of errors
– 1877 APhA meeting:
• Formed Committee on Revision
• Charles Rice named as chair
Charles Rice
• 1841-1901
– Creator of the modern pharmacopeia
• 6th Revision was very different from previous
editions
• Provided a useful tool for pharmacists who
were abandoning in-store manufacturing and
focusing on quality and standards
– Father of the National Formulary
United States Pharmacopeia
• Changes implemented with Rice at helm:
– List of guiding principles - 1880
• Use of English weights and measures (rather than
English and Latin)
• Parts by weight
• Use of a single alphabetic list
• Chemical formulas, specific gravities, and atomic
weights were to be added
• USP VI was to “address the needs of professional
practice, mass manufacturing, and developing
regulations against drug adulteration”
National Formulary
• Pharmacists were becoming concerned with rapid
growth of manufacturers in the mid-1880s
– Didn’t want to merely “count and pour”
– Wanted lists of formulas that physicians could prescribe
and pharmacists could compound
• Rice served as ch ...
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The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
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The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
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effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
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One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
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Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident