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UK legislation project 1968 (United Kingdom Public General Acts) UKPGA 1968-67 #36 File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
The act defines three categories of medicine: prescription only medicines (POM), [3] which are available only from a pharmacist if prescribed by an appropriate practitioner (including, but not limited to doctors, dentists, optometrists, prescribing pharmacists and nurses); pharmacy medicines (P), available only from a pharmacist but without a ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Pharmaceuticals policy" ... Medicines Act 1968; Medicines reconciliation;
(ii) any Act of a Legislature subject to the condition that such Act is reproduced or published together with any commentary thereon or any other original matter; (iii) the report of any committee, commission, council, board or other like body appointed by the government if such report has been laid on the Table of the Legislature, unless the ...
The British Pharmacopoeia is published on behalf of the Health Ministers of the United Kingdom; on the recommendation of the Commission on Human Medicines, in accordance with section 99(6) of the Medicines Act 1968, and notified in draft to the European Commission (EC) in accordance with Directive 98/34/EEC.
Under the Medicines Act 1968, the CSD was replaced in 1970 by the Medicines Commission, which established the Committee on Safety of Medicines (CSM) as a Government advisory committee under Section 4 of the Act. [3]
c. 46), that opium and its derivatives were prohibited and therefore required a prescription. Drugs with a 2% or less of opium content (0.2 percent morphine or 0.1 percent heroin) were exempt from the 1920 Act. In contrast with legislation regulating other industries at the time, the Pharmacy Act neglected to restrict the profession to men only ...