AACP History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group Newsletters
About the History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group
The AACP History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group publishes two issues of the newsletter per year. As an open academic forum, the AACP History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group strives to facilitate the exchange of ideas and innovation among pharmacy faculty across disciplines; to serve broadly as an accurate information resource for teaching, learning, and scholarship pertaining to the evolution and history of the pharmacy profession; to develop and maintain historical collections of artifacts and school or college museums; and to ensure the lessons, the message, and the legacy of the pharmacy profession is preserved to educate future generations of pharmacy students. The SIG’s mission rests on the premise that the history and legacy of the pharmacy profession will always be relevant to all pharmacy practice areas, including current and future scopes of practice.
The AACP and the History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group make the .pdf copies of the Pharmacy Chronicles: Past, Present, and Future—History of Pharmacy SIG Newsletter available under a Creative Commons (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs) license.
Researchers and readers are free to download and share the .pdf newsletters for their personal and educational use, providing they give appropriate credit to AACP and the History of Pharmacy Special Interest Group. Users may not use the newsletters or their contents for commercial purposes and may not modify or change the newsletters or their contents.
Download Copies of Pharmacy Chronicles: Past, Present, and Future—History of Pharmacy SIG Newsletter by clicking on the issue name.
Applying Lessons Learned from the History of the Drug Distribution System to the Current Opioid Epidemic, by Madrona Boutros and Kenneth Pawa (p. 6)
“Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori” . . . But Only When Accompanied by a Field Medical Kit, by Megan Undeberg (p. 7)
Influenza Pandemic of 1918: Impact, Treatment, and the Response of US Community Pharmacists, by Jane E. Krause, Alicia S. Cheng, Rurie W. Lee, and Holly L. Mason (p. 8)
Student Pharmacists’ Impression of Three Pandemics, by Tracey L. Mersfelder (p. 9)
Pharmacy Through the Len of Hollwood III: “Happy Land,” by David M. Baker and Aqsa Alam (p. 10)
The American Revolution’s Impact on Pharmacy in America, by Kaitlyn Ledet and Victoria Miller (p. 5)
Healing Needles: The History of Acupuncture and a Role for Pharmacists, by Luning Shi and Michael Hegener (p. 6)
Factors Influencing Changing Gender Demographics in Maryland Pharmacy from World War II through the 21st Century, by Catherine Botescu, Brittany Botescu, Cynthia Boyle, and James M. Culhane (p. 7)
Pharmacy Through the Lens of Hollywood I: “It’s the Old Army Game,” by David M. Baker, Stephen J. Dias, and Eric Nemec II (p. 9)