Professional Aspirations and the Limits of Occupational Autonomy: The Case of Pharmacy in Nineteenth-Century Ontario.
R.J. Clark
Abstract
This study of the professionalization of pharmacy in nineteenth-century Ontario investigates the ambivalent nature of pharmacists' work which linked it both to the professions and to mercantile activity. Despite the professions' ambiguous position, and the contest for authority with the orthodox medical profession, pharmacists in nineteenth-century Ontario, as elsewhere, were largely successful in securing their professional bona fides. Based primarily on an analysis of nineteenth-century medical and pharmaceutical journals, this article is an initial attempt to understand the conflicts which helped define pharmacists?Äô place in the Ontario occupational hierarchy in general, and the health services sector, in particular.
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ISSN 0823-2105
© 2012 Canadian Society for the History of Medicine/
Société canadienne d'histoire de la médecine