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[This chapter considers the professionalization of pharmacy in six Australian colonies, where there were no previous European occupants, where most of those practising pharmacy had been trained in Britain, and where the indigenous population played no part. Many brought with them experience of the British model of pharmacy and the role of the PSGB. The processes by which pharmacists came together to form pharmaceutical societies, sought state support for the passage of Pharmacy and Poisons Acts, fended off attempts by the medical profession to control them, and succeeded in regulating and restricting pharmacy ownership, were intimately linked, and are best considered on a colony-by-colony basis.]
Published: Oct 23, 2021
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