Quinn Andrews: Federal Restrictions in Pharmacotherapeutics: Motivations for Medicinal Alcohol Prescriptions During Prohibition

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"The Learning Lab is a place dedicated to the search of knowledge.  Throughout this year I have gotten to find my own path in research with the help of Carol,  and through this process become more confident in my abilities as a researcher and a person. If I can give advice to future Learning Lab interns, it would be to trust your instincts, and to see where they take you."

-Quinn Andrews, April 2020

Quinn Andrews is a current sophomore at the University of Kentucky,  studying a chemical engineering major with a minor in biology. She aspires to attend the UK College of Dentistry to become a general dentist. She is an active member in Alpha Phi Omega, a coed service fraternity, and is an active member of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honors fraternity. In her free time, Quinn has a passion for coffee, knitting, and her three small dogs. 

Quinn worked with the William E. Adams papers, 1890-1953, studying alcohol prescription patterns during Prohibition. The collection includes an alcohol prescription book, tobacco and opiate orders, and personal papers of a physician from Sinai, Kentucky. Quinn was initially drawn to the collection by the opiate orders, but throughout the processing of the papers developed a passion for the alcohol prescription book and how it represents the start of government restrictions in the doctors office. 

Quinn presented her research using the William E. Adams papers in an oral presentation at the Kentucky Honors Roundtable held at the University of Louisville in Louisville, Kentucky, February 28-29, 2020. She was also selected to present her poster at the National Conference of Undergraduate Research, to be held at Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana, March 26-28, 2020. Her travel was funded by the University of Kentucky Libraries and Office of Undergraduate Research.

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Andrews, Quinn: Federal Restrictions in Pharmacotherapeutics Motivations for Medicinal Alcohol Prescriptions During Prohibition." National Conference of Undergraduate Research, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, March 26-28, 2020. [Cancelled due to COVID-19]

Research abstract: Federal Restrictions in Pharmacotherapeutics: Motivations for Medicinal Alcohol Prescriptions During Prohibition

United States laws regarding alcohol and drug use have a complicated history of success and failure while ostensibly attempting to protect people from substance abuse. From 1920 to 1933, alcohol was restricted by a Constitutional amendment that forbid the production or sale of alcohol, unless prescribed by a physician. The 1919 Volstead Act prohibited more than one pint of liquor, such as 100 proof whiskey, per prescription every ten days and required all alcohol prescriptions to be written on approved prescription pads to restrict the use of alcohol to medical supervision. It is reasonable to question how and why doctors prescribed alcohol during this time. While much is known about doctors in cities such as New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia, little is known about how rural doctors prescribed alcohol during this time. Analyzing primary sources from this period will provide insight into the issue. Using the 1928 alcohol prescription book in the collection of William E. Adams Papers at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center, research will detail how Dr. Adams provided medicinal alcohol to rural Kentuckians for various ailments. The aim of this research is to elucidate the therapeutic rationale for a physician to prescribe alcohol through analysis of patient names, illnesses, demographics, frequency of prescriptions as well as comparing names from census records compiled in 1920 and 1930. This research is important because it showcases the first time the United States government restricted the prescribing power of physicians, a trend that has continued to this day.

Quinn Andrews: Federal Restrictions in Pharmacotherapeutics: Motivations for Medicinal Alcohol Prescriptions During Prohibition