Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/48301
Title: Professional ethics in Great Britain
Authors: Whittet, T. D.
Keywords: Pharmacy -- Moral and ethical aspects
Pharmacy -- Great Britain -- History
Pharmacy -- Societies, etc.
Issue Date: 1987-09
Publisher: Chamber of Pharmacists
Citation: Whittet, T. D. (1987). Professional ethics in Great Britain. The Pharmacist, 16, 25-31.
Abstract: Some form of pharmaceutical ethics has been in force in England since at least 1316, for in that year the Gild Pepperers of Soper Lane made ordinances for the control of drugs and spicery.' This gild, of which the earliest record is 1179/80 contained pepperers, spicers and apothecaries. The latter seem to have been an autonomous section, for as early as 1306, there is a mention of wardens of the apothecaries in the City of London records. The titles pepperer, spicer and apothecary were often used for the same person on different occasions.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/48301
Appears in Collections:The Pharmacist, Issue 16
The Pharmacist, Issue 16

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