The value of a Pharmacopoeia depends upon the fidelity with which it conforms to the best state of medical knowledge of the day. Its usefulness depends upon the sanction it receives from the medical community and the public, and the extent to which it... Medical Repository - Page 4291821Full view - About this book
| Medicine - 1821 - 724 pages
...those, the utility of u im:ii is most fully established and best understood ; and to form from then preparations and compositions, in which their powers...corporations. Their usefulness has generally been co- extensive with the influence of the bodies of men from whom they hare originated. If they have... | |
| American Medical Association. Section on Pharmacology - Pharmacology - 1910 - 236 pages
...with which it conforms to the best state of medical knowledge of the day. Its usefulness depends on the sanction it receives from the medical community...and practice of those for whose use it is intended. The assertion has been made that the materia medica of a century ago might be considered as "lilliputian"... | |
| United States. Task Force on Prescription Drugs - Drugs - 1968 - 72 pages
...them preparations and compositions, in which their powers may be exerted to the greatest advantage. I should likewise distinguish those articles by convenient...and practice of those for whose use it is intended." (20) In the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the USP and the NF are charged with providing uniform 1 These... | |
| Consumer protection - 1972 - 448 pages
...trouble or uncertainty in the intercourse of physicians and apothecaries The value of a Pharmacopeia depends upon the fidelity with which it conforms to...and practice of those for whose use it is intended Today, the USP, conforming to the best state of knowledge of the day, performs four traditional functions:... | |
| 1821 - 668 pages
...trouble or uncertainty in the intercourse of physicians and apothecaries. " The value of a Pharmacopeia depends upon the fidelity with which it conforms to...with the influence of the bodies of men from whom they have originated. If they have been less useful than might have been hoped from their character... | |
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