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Famous pharmacist
Émile Coué was a French apothecary who noticed that, while most of his drugs didn’t really work, the placebo effect was strong enough that people seemed to be curing themselves. Unwilling to expose people to medications that might harm them, he closed his shop and became a psychologist, teaching people about the power of positive self-talk.
Famous pharmacist
Tadeusz Pankiewicz was a Polish Roman-Catholic pharmacist. When his pharmacy, along with three other pharmacies, was enclosed by the newly-formed Kraków Ghetto, he was the only pharmacist who chose to stay and live there.
He provided healthcare to the Jews, often free of charge. His pharmacy became a location for underground activity. He helped Jews change their identities and hide on the premises when threatened with deportation. He has been named Righteous Among Nations.
Famous Pharmacist
Friedrich Sertürner, who discovered morphine
Famous pharmacist
George F. Archambault, father of consultant pharmacy.
“It is the pharmacist’s professional responsibility to protect the public against iatrogenesis, physician-induced injury or disease in the area of drug prescribing especially as to overdosage, incompatibilities, contraindications, and synergistic drug actions.”
"It takes courage to be among the first to depart from the conventional pathways to the unblazed trails where progress is made. In such departures the "adventurer," be he an association or an individual, is often referred to as someone on 'cloud nine,' an idealist, and often too, he meets with the outright hostility of his colleagues who do not want the status quo changed. These objectors, the truly unrealistic ones, are those who never learn history's one important lesson: namely, 'nothing is permanent but change."