In most places, medicine was regulated but only very incompletely. There was considerable friction amongst different kinds of practitioners, such as apothecaries and physicians, and a small literature that addressed such controversies.
Last Name Sort descending | First Name | Title | Date |
---|---|---|---|
[author not specified] | The apothecaries reply to the city-reasons against their bill | 1694 | |
[author not specified] | An essay for the regvlation of the practice of physick. Upon which regulation are grounded… | 1673 | |
[author not specified] | The state of physick in London | 1698 | |
[author not specified] | Representation for the apothecaries of Edinburgh... | 1695 | |
[author not specified] | The sick may have advice for nothing | 1680 | |
[author not specified] | The principles of the chymists of London stated | 1676 | |
[author not specified] | Newes out of the west: or, The character of a mountebank. Being a discourse betweene… | 1647 | |
[author not specified] | Hippocrates ridens. Or, Joco-serious reflections... | 1686 | |
[author not specified] | A dialogue ... concerning a...pamphlet called the conclave of physicians | 1686 | |
[author not specified] | The physicians reply to the surgeons answer | 1690 |