Higby G J
American Institute of the History of Pharmacy, Madison, WI 53706-1508.
Am J Hosp Pharm. 1994 Nov 15;51(22):2817-23.
The history of hospital pharmacy in the United States from the Colonial period to the 1930s is explored. America's first hospital pharmacist was Jonathan Roberts, hired in 1752. Like most other early hospital apothecaries, Roberts was an apprentice physician. His successor, John Morgan, proposed that the practices of medicine and pharmacy be separate. By 1811 the New York Hospital had a full-time pharmaceutical practitioner. The niche available for hospital pharmacy was small during the nineteenth century because most Americans were treated at home. Two pioneers who advanced the profession during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were Charles Rice and Martin Wilbert. Hospital pharmacists were sought out during the Civil War because of their experience in manufacturing drug preparations and as buyers. Immigration after the Civil War soon doubled the number of hospitals. The post-Civil War expansion of hospitals also coincided with the reform movement in nursing and the rise of scientific medicine. Hospital pharmacists became indispensable as supply masters and manufacturers. Physicians demanded professional pharmaceutical services for handling more complex therapies. Administrators learned that it was more economical to fill inpatient prescriptions inhouse. While community pharmacy had long since abandoned manufacturing and some compounding, hospital pharmacists retained these roles. However, the image of pharmacists as corner druggists was hard to shake. During the 1920s voices called for hospital pharmacists to organize. Edward Spease led in aligning schools of pharmacy with hospitals. In 1927 the first hospital pharmacy internship program was begun. A section for hospital pharmacists within the American Pharmaceutical Association was established in 1936, and the first state associations were founded during the 1920s. By the end of the 1930s, the stage was set for the national movement that followed. By the 1930s, American hospital pharmacists had reached the critical mass necessary for group identity on a national level.
本文探讨了从殖民时期到20世纪30年代美国医院药学的历史。美国第一位医院药剂师是乔纳森·罗伯茨,他于1752年受雇。和其他大多数早期医院药剂师一样,罗伯茨是一名实习医生。他的继任者约翰·摩根提议将医学和药学的实践分开。到1811年,纽约医院有了一名全职药剂师。在19世纪,医院药学的发展空间很小,因为大多数美国人在家接受治疗。19世纪和20世纪初推动该行业发展的两位先驱是查尔斯·赖斯和马丁·威尔伯特。内战期间,由于医院药剂师在药品制剂生产和采购方面的经验,他们被征召入伍。内战后的移民潮使医院数量很快翻了一番。内战后医院的扩张也与护理改革运动和科学医学的兴起相吻合。医院药剂师作为供应主管和制造商变得不可或缺。医生们要求提供专业的药学服务来处理更复杂的治疗方法。管理人员了解到在医院内部配制住院病人处方更经济。虽然社区药房早就放弃了生产和一些配药工作,但医院药剂师仍保留了这些职责。然而,药剂师作为街角药店药剂师的形象很难改变。在20世纪20年代,有人呼吁医院药剂师组织起来。爱德华·斯皮斯带头使药学院与医院建立联系。1927年,第一个医院药学实习项目启动。1936年,美国药学协会内设立了医院药剂师分会,20世纪20年代成立了第一批州协会。到20世纪30年代末,为随后的全国性运动奠定了基础。到20世纪30年代,美国医院药剂师已达到在全国层面形成群体认同所需的临界数量。