Calomel Suspension**Section of Practical Pharmacy and Dispensing, A. Ph. A., Nashville, Aug., 1913.
โ Scribed by Nitardy, F.W.
- Book ID
- 102415802
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 1914
- Weight
- 154 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0898-140X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
before he undertook the study of medicine, and the same thing applied to the pharmacist. He could see no objection to having knowledge as to whether a medical college in New York or California taught prescription-writing, but he could see no benefit to be derived from such an investigation, beyond the securing of a lot of statistics for publication, and, personally, he did not agree with this tendency. He believed the physician and pharmacist should be, from a scientific and professional standpoint, intimate friends in every respect. H e had found it better policy not to allow a continuous enmity between the two professions. A great many physicians were willing to write prescriptions and trust to the pharmacists, who had the proper education, to correct their Latin. Very often the physician did not know the exact degree of solubility of certain articles, but he said "make a solution," and left it to the pharmacist, and it would be bad taste for the pharmacist to conclude from that, that the physician was a fool.
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