Poisons (General
Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968[1]
1 Interpretation
(1) In
this Order unless the context otherwise requires –
“animal”
includes poultry;
“antimonial poisons”
means chlorides of antimony, oxides of antimony, sulphides of antimony,
antimonates, antimonites and organic compounds of antimony;
“arsenical poisons”
means halides of arsenic, oxides of arsenic, sulphides of arsenic, arsenates,
arsenites, copper acetoarsenite, sodium thioarsenates and organic compounds of
arsenic;
“food”
includes a beverage;
“inspector”
has the same meaning as in Article 17 of the Law;
“Law” means
the Poisons
(Jersey) Law 1952;[2]
“listed seller of Part 2
poisons” means a person entitled, subject to the provisions of the Law
and of this Order, to sell poisons included in Part 2 of the Poisons List
by virtue of the entry of the person’s name in the list kept in pursuance
of Article 11(1) of the Law;
“medicine for the
internal treatment of human ailments” includes any medicine to be
administered by hypodermic injection, but does not include any mouth wash, eye
drops, eye lotion, ear drops, douche or similar articles;
“sale exempted by Article 10
of the Law” means a sale made in such circumstances as to be entitled,
except as provided by this Order, to exemption under Article 10 of the Law
from the foregoing provisions of Part 3 of the Law.[3]
(2) Any
reference in the Schedules to this Order to the percentage of a poison
contained in any substance or preparation shall, unless otherwise expressly
provided, be construed in the following manner, that is to say, a reference to
a substance or preparation containing 1% of any poison means –
(a) in the case of a solid,
that 1 g of the poison is contained in every 100 g of the substance or
preparation;
(b) in the case of a
liquid, that 1 ml of the poison, or, if the poison itself is a solid, 1 g of
the poison, is contained in every 100 ml of the substance or preparation,
and so in proportion for
any greater or lesser percentage.
(3) In
this Order, any reference to an alkaloid shall include a reference to any salt
of that alkaloid, and, in the case where the esters of an alkaloid are included
in the Poisons List by virtue of the words “its esters”, to any
esters of that alkaloid.
(4) Any
reference in this Order to a form set out in a Schedule to this Order shall
include a reference to a form substantially to the like effect.
2 Metric system and imperial system
(1) For
the purposes of this Order a poison shall not be regarded as sold, issued or
supplied otherwise than in accordance with a prescription or other order by
reason only that the prescription or order specifies a quantity of the poison
in terms of the imperial system and the quantity sold, issued or supplied is
the equivalent of that amount in the metric system, or by reason only that the
prescription or order specifies a quantity of the poison in terms of the metric
system and the quantity sold, issued or supplied is the equivalent of that
amount in the imperial system.
(2) For
the purposes of this Order the quantity of a poison in the imperial system
which is the equivalent of a particular quantity in the metric system, and the
quantity of a poison in the metric system which is the equivalent of a similar
quantity in the imperial system shall be deemed to be that set out as such in
the Tables of Equivalents contained in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British
Pharmaceutical Codex or the British Veterinary Codex.
Application and Relaxation
of Part 3 of the Law
3 Restriction of sales by shopkeepers
It shall not be lawful
for any shopkeeper to sell poisons on any premises used for or in connection
with the shopkeeper’s retail business, notwithstanding that the sale is
exempted by Article 10 of the Law, unless the shopkeeper complies with the
provisions of Article 9(1)(a)
or (b) of the Law.
4 Exemption of animal medicines
The provisions of Article 9(1)(a) and (b) of the Law shall not apply with respect to any medicine for
the treatment of animals sold by a person carrying on a business which
comprises the manufacture of medicines for the treatment of animals, if the
following requirements are complied with –
(a) a statement in writing
signed by the owner of the business, or, in the case of a corporate body, on
behalf of that body, stating the name of the business, the principal place
where it is carried on, the name of the person in charge of the sale of the
medicines, and the premises on which the medicines are to be sold must be
furnished prior to the sale to the Minister;
(b) the sale must be
effected on the premises specified in the statement; and
(c) an inspector must be
permitted at all reasonable times to enter the premises and be given all
reasonable facilities to make such examination and enquiry and to do such other
things (including the taking, on payment therefor, of samples) as may be
necessary for ascertaining whether the provisions of the Law and of this Order
are being complied with.
5 Extension of labelling provisions and relaxation with respect to
poisons in Schedule 2 and Part B of Schedule 4
(1) Subject
as hereinafter provided, the provisions of Article 9(1)(c) of the Law and of Articles 17
to 22 of this Order shall apply to sales exempted by Article 10 of the Law,
other than sales of poisons to be exported to purchasers outside Jersey, and
shall also apply to the supply of poisons (otherwise than on sale) in like
manner as if references in the said provisions to the sale and the seller of
poisons included references to the supply and the supplier of poisons
respectively.
(2) The
said provisions, except the provisions of Article 21 of this Order and Article 9(1)(c)(iv) of the Law as modified by Article 22
of this Order shall not apply to the sale or supply of any of the poisons
included in Schedule 2 to this Order to a person who –
(a) carries on a business
in the course of which poisons are regularly sold by way of wholesale dealing
or are regularly used in the manufacture of other articles; and
(b) requires the poison for
the purpose of that business;
if the outside of the
package in which the poison is sold or supplied is labelled conspicuously with
words indicating the dangerous properties of the poison.
(3) The
provisions of Article 9(1)(c)(iii) of the Law and of Article 20 of
this Order shall not apply to sales exempted by Article 10 of the Law of
any of the poisons included in Part B of Schedule 4 to this Order.
6 Substances to which Article 9(2) of the Law applies
The provisions of Article 9(2)
of the Law shall apply with respect to all substances included in Schedule 1
to this Order, whether or not the poison sold is a poison included in Part 1
of the Poisons List, and shall not apply with respect to any other substance:
Provided that –
(a) Article 9(2)(a)
of the Law shall, in its application to sales by listed sellers of Part 2
poisons, be deemed to be satisfied if the person to whom the poison is sold is
known by the person in charge of the premises on which the poison is sold or of
the department of the business in which the sale is effected to be a person to
whom the poison may properly be sold; and
(b) the
provisions of the said paragraph shall not apply, so far as the poison
specified in the first column of Schedule 15 to this Order is concerned,
to sales of substances specified in the second column of that Schedule.
7 Extension
of Article 9(2) to sales wholesale etc., and relaxation of the said
paragraph
(1) The
provisions of Article 9(2) of the Law as modified by Article 6 of
this Order shall apply to sales exempted by Article 10 of the Law, except
sales of poisons to be exported to purchasers outside Jersey; and shall also
apply to the supply in the form of commercial sample, otherwise than on sale,
of any substance included in Schedule 1 to this Order in like manner as if
references in the said provisions to the sale and seller of poisons
respectively included references to the supply and the supplier of poisons in
the form of commercial samples:
Provided that the said provisions
shall not apply to the sale or supply of any article by the manufacturer thereof
or by a person carrying on a business in the course of which poisons are
regularly sold by way of wholesale dealing, if –
(a) the article is sold or
supplied to a person carrying on a business in the course of which poisons are
regularly sold or are regularly used in the manufacture of other articles; and
(b) the seller or supplier
is reasonably satisfied that the purchaser requires the article for the purpose
of that business.
(2) Article 9(2)(a) of the Law shall, in its
application to sales exempted by Article 10 of the Law and to the supply
in the form of commercial samples of substances included in Schedule 1 to
this Order, be deemed to be satisfied if the person to whom the poison or
sample is sold or supplied is known by the person in charge of the department
of the business through which the sale or supply is effected to be a person to
whom the poison or sample may properly be sold or supplied.
(3) So
much of Article 9(2)(b) of
the Law as requires an entry in a book to be signed by the purchaser of a
poison shall not, as respects the sale of a poison to a person for the purposes
of the person’s trade, business or profession, apply if the following
requirements are satisfied –
(a) the seller must obtain
before the completion of the sale an order in writing signed by the purchaser
stating the seller’s name and address, trade, business or profession, and
the following particulars in regard to the article to be purchased, that is to
say, the purpose for which it is required and the total quantity to be
purchased, or, in the case of an article packed in ampoules, either the said total
quantity or the total quantity intended to be administered or injected;
(b) the seller must be
reasonably satisfied that the signature is that of the person purporting to
have signed the order, and that that person carries on the trade, business or
profession stated in the order, being one in which the poison to be purchased
is used;
(c) the seller must insert
in the entry prescribed by Article 34 of this Order the words
“signed order” and a reference number by which the order can be
identified:
Provided that where a person
represents that the person urgently requires a poison for the purpose of the person’s
trade, business or profession, the seller may, if the person is reasonably
satisfied that the person so requires the poison and is, by reason of some
emergency, unable before delivery either to furnish to the seller an order in
writing duly signed or to attend and sign the entry in the book, deliver the
poison to the purchaser on an undertaking by the purchaser to furnish such an order
within the 24 hours next following.
If any purchaser by whom
any such undertaking has been given fails to deliver to the seller a signed order
in accordance with the undertaking, or if any person for the purpose of
obtaining delivery of any poison under the foregoing proviso makes a statement
which is to the purchaser’s knowledge false, the purchaser shall be
deemed to have contravened the provisions of this Article.
(4) Where
the seller of a poison is reasonably satisfied that the poison is required for
the purpose of medical, dental or veterinary treatment, there shall not
apply –
(a) in the case of a sale
to a hospital, infirmary, health centre, dispensary or clinic, such of the
provisions of this Article as require the purchaser to state the
purchaser’s trade, business or profession and the seller to be satisfied
with respect thereto;
(b) in the case of a sale
of the poison not being a poison to which the Dangerous Drugs (Jersey)
Law 1954 applies to a registered medical practitioner, registered dentist
or registered veterinary surgeon or to a hospital, infirmary, health centre,
dispensary or clinic, such of the provisions of this Article as require the
purchaser to state the purpose for which the poison is required.
8 Exemption from the provisions applying solely to Schedule 1
Such of the provisions of
this Order and of Part 3 of the Law, as modified by this Order, as apply
solely with respect to the substances included in Schedule 1 to this Order,
shall not apply with respect to –
(a) machine-spread
plasters;
(b) surgical dressings; or
(c) articles containing
barium carbonate and prepared for the destruction of rats or mice.
9 Complete
exemption for articles and substances in Schedule 3
Nothing in Part 3 of
the Law or in this Order shall apply –
(a) with respect to any article
included in Group 1 of Schedule 3 to this Order; or
(b) so far as any poison
specified in the first column of Group 2 of that Schedule is concerned, with
respect to any of the articles or substances specified in the second column
opposite the description of the poison.
ADDITIONAL Restrictions on
the Sale of Poisons[4]
10 Restriction
of sale of poisons in Schedule 4[5]
(1) Subject
to the provisions of paragraph (6), it shall not be lawful to sell any
poison included in Schedule 4, except on and in accordance with a
prescription given by a registered medical practitioner, registered dentist or
registered veterinary surgeon in the form provided by this Article:
Provided that where an
authorized seller of poisons is reasonably satisfied that a person ordering any
such poison is a registered medical practitioner who is by reason of some
emergency unable to furnish such a prescription immediately, the authorized
seller may, notwithstanding that no such prescription has been given, if the said
person undertakes to furnish the seller within the 24 hours next following with
such a prescription, deliver the poison ordered in accordance with the
directions of the said person, so, however, that, notwithstanding anything in
any such directions, the supply shall not be repeated unless such a
prescription has been given.
If any person by whom any
such undertaking has been given fails to deliver to the seller a prescription
in accordance with the undertaking, or if any person for the purpose of
obtaining delivery of any poison under the foregoing proviso makes a statement
which is to the person’s knowledge false, the person shall be deemed to
have contravened the provisions of this Article.[6]
(2) This
Article shall apply to the sale of any such poison, but shall not apply to any
sale exempted by Article 10 of the Law.
(3) For
the purposes of this Article, a prescription shall, in the case of any poison
included in Schedule 4, be in writing and be signed by the person giving
it with the person’s usual signature and be dated by the person and in the
case of any poison included in Part A of the said Schedule 4 –
(a) except in the case of a
health prescription, specify the address of the person giving it;
(b) specify the name and
address of the person for whose treatment it is given or, if the prescription
is given by a registered veterinary surgeon, of the person to whom the medicine
is to be delivered;
(c) have written thereon,
if given by a dentist, the words “For dental treatment only” or, if
given by a registered veterinary surgeon, the words “For animal treatment
only”;
(d) when the medicine is
packed otherwise than in ampoules, indicate –
(i) except in the
case of a preparation contained in the British National Formulary, the total
amount to be supplied, and
(ii) except
in the case of a preparation which is to be used for external treatment only,
the dose to be taken;
(e) when the medicine is
packed in ampoules indicate –
(i) except in the
case of a preparation contained in the British National Formulary, either the
total amount to be supplied or the total amount intended to be administered or
injected, and
(ii) in
any case, the amount intended to be administered or injected in each dose.
(4) The
person dispensing the prescription shall comply with the following
requirements –
(a) the prescription must
not be dispensed more than once unless the prescriber has directed thereon
either that it may be dispensed a stated number of times or that it may be
dispensed at stated intervals;
(b) except as provided by paragraph (5),
if the prescription contains a direction that it may be
dispensed a stated number of times or at stated intervals it must not be
dispensed otherwise than in accordance with the direction;
(c) except as provided by paragraph (5),
a prescription which contains a direction that it may
be dispensed a stated number of times but no direction as to the intervals at
which it may be dispensed shall not be dispensed more often than once in 3
days, and a prescription which contains a direction that it is to be dispensed
at stated intervals but no direction as to the number of times that it may be
dispensed shall not be dispensed more often than 3 times;
(d) at the time of
dispensing or, where a poison has been delivered under the proviso to paragraph (1),
on the subsequent receipt of the prescription there must be noted on the
prescription above the signature of the prescriber the name and address of the
seller and the date on which the prescription is dispensed or, as the case may
be, the poison was delivered;
(e) except in the case of a
health prescription or a prescription which may be dispensed again, the
prescription must, for a period of 2 years, be retained and kept on the
premises on which it was dispensed in such manner as to be readily available
for inspection.[7]
(5) In
the case of androgenic, oestrogenic and progestational substances supplied in
the manufacturer’s original pack complete with directions for use as oral
contraceptives, the total quantity prescribed may be supplied in amounts and at
intervals requested by the patient unless the prescriber expressly directs
otherwise.[8]
(6) Notwithstanding
the provisions of paragraph (1), it shall be lawful to sell, otherwise
than on or in accordance with a prescription given by a registered medical
practitioner, registered dentist or registered veterinary surgeon, but subject
to the provisions of Article 11, a medicinal product containing Ibuprofen
for use for the treatment of rheumatic and muscular pain, backache, neuralgia,
migraine, headache, dental pain, dysmenorrhea, feverishness and symptoms of
colds and influenza, with a maximum dose of 400 mg and a maximum daily dose of
1200 mg.[9]
(7) In
this Article, “health prescription” means a prescription given by a
registered medical practitioner under and in accordance with the Health Insurance
(Jersey) Law 1967, or given by a registered medical practitioner or
registered dentist upon a form issued by a public authority (including any
department of the Government of the United Kingdom)
or by a parochial authority for use in connection with a health service of that
authority.[10]
11 Further restriction of sale of poisons
in Schedule 4 [11]
(1) Except
in the circumstances described in paragraph (2), it shall not be lawful to
sell any medicinal product, which contains a poison included in Schedule 4,
unless there is in force in the United Kingdom in respect of that product a
product licence, and the product, as sold in Jersey, conforms in every respect
with the provisions of that licence.
(2) Paragraph (1)
shall not apply to the sale, on and in accordance with a prescription given by
a registered medical practitioner or a registered dentist of a medicinal
product identified by name in the prescription to a person named in that
prescription as the person for whose particular treatment the product is
required.
(3) In
this Article, “product licence” means a licence granted for the
purposes of section 7 of the Medicines Act 1968 of the United Kingdom
(which section prohibits in the United Kingdom, subject to certain exemptions,
certain dealings with medicinal products, except in accordance with a product
licence granted under that section).
12 Additional restriction of sales by authorized sellers of poisons
It shall not be lawful
for any authorized seller of poisons to sell any substance included in Schedule 1
to this Order, notwithstanding that the substance is a poison included in Part 2
of the Poisons List, unless the sale is effected by, or under the supervision
of, a registered pharmacist.
13 Restriction of sales by listed sellers of Part 2 poisons
(1) No
shopkeeper shall be entitled by virtue of being a listed seller of Part 2
poisons to sell –
(a) any poison other than
ammonia, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, potassium quadroxalate and sulphuric
acid, except in a closed container as closed by the manufacturer or other person
from whom the poison was obtained;
(b) any substance included
in Schedule 1 to this Order unless the sale is effected by the shopkeeper
or by a responsible deputy.
In this paragraph the
expression “responsible deputy” means a person nominated as a
deputy on the seller’s form of application, as hereinafter prescribed,
for entry as a listed seller of Part 2 poisons or any person substituted,
by notice in writing to the Minister, for a person so nominated, and not more
than 2 deputies shall be nominated at the same time in respect of one set of
premises.
(2) No
person shall be entitled by virtue of being a listed seller of Part 2 poisons
to sell –
(a) any poison included in
the first column of Part A of Schedule 5 to this Order unless the article
or substance sold is one of the articles or substances specified against the
description of the poison in the second column of that Part, and the container
of the substance is, in addition to any other direction of the Law or of this Order
with respect to labelling, labelled clearly with a notice of the special
purpose for which the article or substance is intended, and a warning that it
is only to be used for that purpose;
(b) any poison included in Part
B of Schedule 5 to this Order, unless the purchaser thereof is engaged in
the trade or business of agriculture or horticulture and requires the poison
for the purpose of that trade or business.
14 Requirement as to colouring in certain cases
It shall not be lawful to
sell any poison included in Schedule 16 which is intended for use as a
weed killer or in the prevention of treatment of infestation by animals, plants
or other living organisms unless there has been added to the poison a dye or
other substance which in the case of a poison included in Schedule 16 as a
poison in solution, renders it of a distinctive colour, or, in the case of any
other poison renders it of a distinctive colour whether dry or wet or in
solution:
Provided that this Article
shall not apply in the case of –
(a) poisons which are themselves
of a distinctive colour;
(b) sheep dips which are
already of a distinctive colour; or
(c) articles to be exported
to purchasers outside Jersey.
15 Restriction of sales of Part 1 poisons to shopkeepers
It shall not be lawful to
sell by way of wholesale dealing any poison included in Part 1 of the
Poisons List to a person carrying on a business of shopkeeping unless the
seller –
(a) has reasonable grounds
for believing that the purchaser is an authorized seller of poisons; or
(b) has received a statement
signed by the purchaser or by a person authorized by the purchaser on the
purchaser’s behalf to the effect that the purchaser does not intend to
sell the poison on any premises used for or in connection with the
purchaser’s retail business.
16 Restriction of sale and supply of strychnine and certain other
substances
(1) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply strychnine except as an ingredient in a
medicine:
Provided that this Article
shall not apply to the sale of strychnine –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) for the purpose of
being compounded in medicines prescribed or administered by a registered
medical practitioner or registered veterinary surgeon;
(d) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis, for the purposes of that education or research or analysis; or
(e) to a person producing a
written authority in the form set out in Schedule 14 issued within the
preceding 3 months by a person duly authorized by the Minister, authorizing the
purchase of strychnine for the purpose of killing moles, so, however, that the
quantity sold shall not exceed the quantity, not being more than one ounce,
specified in the authority.
(2) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply any substance to which this paragraph
applies:
Provided that this Article
shall not apply to the sale of a substance to which this paragraph
applies –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis, for the purposes of that education or research or analysis;
(d) to a person producing a
certificate in the form set out in Schedule 17 issued within the preceding
3 months by the Medical Officer of Health or officer of an administration of
the States for which the Minister for Sustainable
Economic Development has responsibility that a substance to which this paragraph
applies named in the certificate is required for use as a rodenticide in ships,
or sewers in such places, as are identified in the certificate, so, however,
that the quantity sold shall not exceed the quantity specified in the
certificate.
This paragraph applies to
monofluoroacetic acid, any salt thereof, fluoroacetamide and fluoroacetanilide.[12]
(3) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply sodium arsenites or potassium arsenites
except as an ingredient in –
(i) a medicine, or
(ii) a
sheep dip or sheep wash in a container clearly labelled with, in addition to
any other direction of the Law or of this Order with respect to labelling, a
notice of the special purpose for which the substance is intended, and a
warning that it is only to be used for that purpose:
Provided that this Article
shall not apply to the sale of sodium arsenites or potassium
arsenites –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) for the purpose of
being compounded in medicines prescribed or administered by a registered
medical practitioner or registered veterinary surgeon; or
(d) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis, for the purpose of that education or research or analysis.
(4) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply lysergide or its salts, mescaline or its
salts, other derivatives of phenethylamine formed by substitution in the
aromatic-ring or their salts or psilocybin:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of lysergide or its salts, mescaline or its salts,
other derivatives of phenethylamine formed by substitution in the aromatic ring
or their salts or psilocybin –
(a) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(b) to a person or institution
concerned with scientific education or research or chemical analysis, for the
purposes of that education or research or analysis; or
(c) to a registered medical
practitioner for the purpose of the medical practitioner’s profession as
such.[13]
(5) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply embutramide or mebezonium iodide:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of embutramide or mebezonium iodide –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis, for the purposes of that education or research or analysis; or
(d) to a registered
veterinary surgeon for the purpose of killing animals or birds in the course of
the veterinary surgeon’s profession as such.
(6) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply fluanisone:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of fluanisone –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis, for the purposes of that education or research or analysis; or
(d) to a registered
veterinary surgeon for the purpose of the veterinary surgeon’s profession
as such.
(7) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply salts of thallium:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of salts of thallium –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do;
(c) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis for the purposes of that education or research or analysis;
(d) other than thallium
sulphate, to a person, or body of persons, carrying on a business in the course
of which salts of thallium are regularly used in the manufacture of other articles,
for the purposes of that business; or
(e) other than thallium
sulphate, as an ingredient in any article, not being an article intended for
internal consumption by any person or animal.[14]
(8) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply zinc phosphide:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of zinc phosphide –
(a) by way of wholesale
dealing;
(b) to be exported to
purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing by the
Minister so to do; or
(c) to a person or
institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis for the purposes of that education or research or analysis.[15]
(9) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply aluminium phosphide:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to the sale of aluminium phosphide –
(a) by
way of wholesale dealing;
(b) to be
exported to purchasers outside Jersey by a person who is authorized in writing
by the Minister so to do;
(c) to a person
or institution concerned with scientific education or research or chemical
analysis for purposes of that education or research or analysis; or
(d) to a person
producing a written authority in the form set out in Schedule 18 issued by
a person duly authorized by the Minister, authorizing the purchase of aluminium
phosphide for the purpose of killing moles.[16]
(10) Any
authority or certificate issued under the provisions of this Article shall be
retained by the seller of the poison to which the authority or certificate
relates.
Supplementary Provisions
with respect to Labelling and Containers
17 Manner of labelling containers
(1) Subject
to the provisions of this Order, the particulars with which the container of a
poison is required to be labelled under Article 9(1)(c) of the Law and under this Order,
must appear in a conspicuous position on the container in which the poison is
sold and on every box or other covering of whatever nature enclosing the
container, and the particulars must be clearly and distinctly set out and not
in any way obscured or obliterated.
(2) Where
the poison is contained in an ampoule, cachet or similar article it shall not
be necessary to label the article itself, if every box or other covering in
which the article is enclosed is duly labelled.
(3) Nothing
in Article 9(1)(c) of the Law
or in Articles 18 to 21 of this Order shall require the labelling of any
transparent cover or any wrapper, hamper, packing case, crate or other covering
used solely for the purposes of transport or delivery.
18 Labelling of name of poison
(1) Subject
as hereinafter provided, for the purposes of Article 9(1)(c)(i) of the Law and of Article 27(3)(a) of this Order, the name of a
poison shall be –
(a) where the term under
which a poison is included in the Poisons List describes the poison
specifically –
(i) the said term,
(ii) the
name published by the General Medical Council as the approved name of the
poison, or
(iii) if
the poison is the subject of a monograph in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British
Pharmaceutical Codex or the British Veterinary Codex, one of the names or
synonyms or abbreviated names set out at the head of the monograph;
(b) where the said term
describes a group of poisons and not the poison specifically –
(i) if the poison is
the subject of a monograph in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British Pharmaceutical
Codex or the British Veterinary Codex, one of the names or synonyms or
abbreviated names set out at the head of the monograph, and
(ii) in
any other case, the accepted scientific name, the name descriptive of the true
nature and origin of the poison or the name published by the General Medical
Council as the approved name of the poison.
(2) For
the purposes aforesaid it shall, in the case of –
(a) a substance which is
the subject of a monograph in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British Pharmaceutical
Codex or the British Veterinary Codex, or any dilution, concentration or
admixture of such a substance;
(b) a preparation contained
in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British Pharmaceutical Codex, the British
National Formulary or the British Veterinary Codex, or any dilution,
concentration or admixture of such a preparation; or
(c) a surgical dressing for
which a standard is prescribed in the British Pharmaceutical Codex,
be sufficient,
notwithstanding anything in paragraph (1) to state the name, synonym or
abbreviated name used to describe the substance, preparation or surgical
dressing in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British Pharmaceutical Codex, the
British National Formulary or the British Veterinary Codex with the addition of
the letters “B.P.”, “B.P.C.”, “B.N.F.” or
“B.Vet. C.”, as the case may be.[17]
(3) For
the purposes aforesaid it shall, in the case of a preparation containing a
poison specified in the first column of Schedule 6, be sufficient,
notwithstanding anything in paragraph (1), to state the name of the poison
or substance mentioned in the second column of the said Schedule in respect of
which the proportion of the poison to the total ingredients of the preparation
is in accordance with the provisions of Article 17(2) expressed.
(4) For
the purposes aforesaid it shall, in the case of a preparation derived from nux
vomica or from opium and containing one or more alkaloids of nux vomica or of
opium named in the Poisons List, be sufficient, notwithstanding anything in paragraph (1),
to state the name of strychnine or morphine, as the case may be, or one of the
names or abbreviated names of strychnine or morphine, as the case may be, set
out at the head of the monographs in the British Pharmacopoeia, the British
Pharmaceutical Codex or the British Veterinary Codex.
(5) In
this Article, the “General Medical Council” means the council
established under the Medical Act 1956, of the United Kingdom.
19 Labelling
of particulars as to proportion of the poison
(1) For
the purposes of Article 9(1)(c)(ii)
of the Law the label of the container of any preparation containing a poison as
one of its ingredients shall, subject as hereinafter provided, include a
statement of the proportion which the poison bears to the total ingredients of
the preparation.
(2) In
the case of a preparation containing a poison specified in the first column of Schedule 6
it shall be sufficient to state on the label the particulars specified in the second
column of that Schedule against the description of the poison.
(3) In
the case of a preparation derived from nux vomica
or from opium and containing one or more alkaloids of nux vomica or of opium named in the Poisons List,
it shall be sufficient, so far as those alkaloids are concerned, to state on
the label the proportion of strychnine or of morphine, as the case may be,
contained in the preparation.
(4) In
the case of a substance, preparation or surgical dressing which is named in
accordance with Article 1(2), it shall not be necessary to state on the
label the proportion of the poison contained in the substance, preparation or
surgical dressing and, in the case of any dilution, concentration or admixture
of such a substance or preparation, it shall be sufficient to state the
proportion which the substance or preparation bears to the total ingredients of
the dilution, concentration or admixture.
(5) Where
the poison is in tablets, pills, cachets, capsules, lozenges or similar articles,
or in ampoules, it shall be sufficient to state on the label of the box or
other covering in which the articles are enclosed the number of articles and
the amount of the poison, or in the case of such a preparation as is mentioned
in paragraph (4), the amount of the preparation contained in each article.
(6) Where
any proportion is stated as a percentage, the statement shall indicate whether
the percentage is calculated on the basis of weight in weight, weight in
volume, or volume in volume.
20 Indication
of character of the poison
(1) In
pursuance of Article 9(1)(c)(iii)
of the Law (which requires the containers of poisons to be labelled with
the word “Poison” or other prescribed indication of character), the
container of any article specified in Schedule 7 to this Order shall,
instead of being labelled with the word “Poison”, be labelled with
the words specified in the said Schedule as applicable to that article.
(2) The
said words specified as aforesaid or the word “Poison”, as the case
may be, must not be modified in meaning by the addition of any other words or
marks, and –
(a) in the case of a
substance included in Schedule 1, must either be in red lettering or be
set against a red background; and
(b) in all cases must
either be on a separate label or be surrounded by a line within which there
must be no other words except words with which the container of the poison is
required to be labelled under the Law or this Order.
21 Special
cautions in the case of certain articles
(1) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply any poison –
(a) in the case of a liquid
other than a medicine, contained in a bottle of a capacity of not more than 120
fluid ounces, unless the bottle is labelled with the words “Not to be
taken”;
(b) in the case of an
embrocation, liniment, lotion, liquid antiseptic or other liquid medicine for
external application, unless the container is labelled with the name of the article
and the words “For external use only”.
(2) It
shall not be lawful to sell or supply any compressed hydrocyanic acid unless
the container is labelled with the words “Warning. This container holds
poisonous gas and should only be opened and used by persons having expert
knowledge of the precautions to be taken in its use”.
(3) This
Article shall be in addition to the other requirements of the Law and of this Order
with respect to labelling but shall not apply to the sale or supply of poisons
to be exported to purchasers outside Jersey.
22 Name
of seller and address of premises
(1) The
provisions of Article 9(1)(c)(iv)
of the Law (which requires the container of a poison to be labelled with
the name of the seller and the address of the premises on which it was sold)
shall not apply in the case of an article sold for the purposes of being sold
again in the same container.
(2) The
requirements of Article 9(1)(c)(iv)
of the Law shall be deemed to be satisfied, in the case of a poison supplied
from a warehouse or depot, if the container of the poison is labelled with the
address of the supplier’s principal place of business or, in the case of
a limited liability company, of the registered office of the company.
(3) Where
any poison is sold in a container and outer covering, being the container and
covering in which it was obtained by the seller, it shall be sufficient if the
name of the seller and the address of the premises on which it was sold appear
only on the outer covering.
(4) Where
the names of more than one person or more than one address appear on any label,
there must also be words on the label indicating clearly which person is the
seller and at which of the addresses the poison was sold.
23 Form
of containers
(1) It
shall not be lawful to sell, whether wholesale or retail, or supply any poison
unless –
(a) it is contained in a
container impervious to the poison and sufficiently stout to prevent leakage
arising from the ordinary risks of handling and transport; and
(b) in the case of a liquid
contained in a bottle of a capacity of not more than 40 fluid ounces (1136 ml)
not being –
(i) a medicine made
up ready for the internal treatment of human or animal ailments,
(ii) a
local anaesthetic for injection in the treatment of human or animal ailments,
or
(iii) a
sterile ophthalmic solution in a single dose sterile bottle enclosed in a
sealed container,
the outer surface of
the bottle is fluted vertically with ribs or grooves recognisable by touch.[18]
(2) Paragraph (1)(b) of this Article shall not apply
to the sale or supply of poisons to be exported to purchasers outside Jersey or
the sale or supply of poisons to a person or institution concerned with
scientific education or research or chemical analysis, for the purposes of that
education or research or analysis.
Storage and Transport
24 Storage
of poisons
(1) It
shall not be lawful to store any poison except in a container impervious to the
poison and sufficiently stout to prevent leakage from the container arising
from the ordinary risks of handling.
(2) It
shall not be lawful to store any substance included in Schedule 1 in any
retail shop or premises used in connection therewith unless the substance is
stored –
(a) in a cupboard or drawer
reserved solely for the storage of poisons;
(b) in a part of the
premises which is partitioned off or otherwise separated from the remainder of
the premises and to which customers are not permitted to have access; or
(c) on a shelf reserved
solely for the storage of poisons and –
(i) no food is kept directly
under the shelf, and
(ii) the
container of the substance is distinguishable by touch from the containers of articles
and substances other than poisons stored upon the same premises:
Provided that, in the case
of any such substance to be used in agriculture or horticulture, it shall not
be lawful to store the substance on any shelf, or in any such part of the
premises as aforesaid if food is kept in that part, or in any cupboard or
drawer unless the cupboard or drawer is reserved solely for the storage of
poisons to be used as aforesaid.
25 Transport
of poisons
It shall not be lawful to
consign any poison for transport unless it is sufficiently stoutly packed to
avoid leakage arising from the ordinary risks of handling and transport.
26 Special
provisions with respect to the transport of poisons specified in Schedule 8
(1) It
shall not be lawful to consign for transport by carrier any poison included in Schedule 8
unless the outside of the package containing the article is labelled
conspicuously with the name or description of the poison as set forth in the said
Schedule and a notice indicating that it is to be kept separate from food and
from empty containers in which food has been contained.
(2) It
shall not be lawful for any person knowingly to transport any such poison as
aforesaid, either on the person’s own behalf or for another person, in
any vehicle in which food is being transported, unless the food is carried in a
part of the vehicle effectively separated from that containing the poison, or
is otherwise adequately protected from the risk of contamination.
(3) This
Article shall not apply with respect to medicines.
Special Provisions with
respect to Hospitals
27 Supply
of medicines to out-patients from certain hospitals etc.
(1) The
provisions of Part 3 of the Law and of this Order, except the provisions
of Article 20, shall not apply with respect to –
(a) any medicine for the
treatment of human ailments dispensed from a hospital, infirmary or dispensary
maintained by any public authority, or out of public funds, or by a charity;
(b) any medicine for the
treatment of animals supplied from a veterinary hospital which is under the
superintendence of a registered veterinary surgeon,
if the requirements
contained in the following provisions of this Article are satisfied in relation
thereto.
(2) The
medicine must not be supplied except by, or on and in accordance with a
prescription of, a registered medical practitioner for the purposes of medical
treatment, or a registered dentist for the purposes of dental treatment, or a
registered veterinary surgeon for the purposes of animal treatment.
(3) In
a case where a substance included in Schedule 1 is supplied, a record must
be kept on the premises in such a way that there can readily be traced at any
time during a period of 2 years after the date on which the substance was
supplied the following particulars –
(a) the name and quantity
of the poison supplied;
(b) the date on which the
poison was supplied;
(c) the name and address of
the person to whom the poison was supplied; and
(d) the name of the person
who supplied the poison or who gave the prescription upon which it was
supplied:
Provided that this paragraph
shall not apply to a medicine supplied on and in accordance with a prescription
given by a registered medical practitioner under and in accordance with the Health Insurance
(Jersey) Law 1967.[19]
(4) The
container of the medicine must be labelled –
(a) with a designation and
address sufficient to identify the hospital, infirmary or dispensary from which
it was supplied;
(b) except in the case of a
medicine made up ready for treatment, with the word “Poison”;
(c) in the case of a poison
supplied from a veterinary hospital, with the words “For animal treatment
only”,
and in the case of a
medicine to which Article 21 applies the requirements of that Article
shall be satisfied in addition to the requirements aforesaid.
28 Supply
of medicines for use in hospitals etc.
(1) This
Article and Article 30 apply to any hospital, infirmary, dispensary,
clinic, nursing home or other institution at which human ailments are treated
(in the said Articles referred to as “an institution”).
(2) In
any institution in which medicines are dispensed in a dispensing or
pharmaceutical department in charge of a person appointed for that purpose, no
medicine containing a poison shall be issued from that department for use in
the wards, operating theatres or other sections of the institution, except in
accordance with the requirements contained in the following provisions of this Article.
(3) The
medicines must not be issued except upon a written order signed by a registered
medical practitioner, registered dentist or by a sister or nurse in charge of a
ward, theatre or other section of the institution:
Provided that in a case of
emergency a medicine containing a poison may be issued, notwithstanding that no
such written order is produced, on an undertaking by the person ordering the
medicine to furnish such a written order within 24 hours next following.
(4) The
container of the medicine must be labelled –
(a) with words describing
its contents; and
(b) in the case of
substances included in Schedule 1, with a distinguishing mark or other
indication indicating that the poison is to be stored in a cupboard reserved
solely for the storage of poisons and other dangerous substances.
29 Saving for oral
contraceptives in certain cases [20]
(1) The
provisions of Part 3 of the Law and of this Order shall not apply with
respect to any oral contraceptive supplied –
(a) from a family planning clinic, if the
requirements contained in paragraphs (2) and (3) are satisfied in relation
thereto; or
(b) by a duly qualified medical practitioner
otherwise than from a family planning clinic.
(2) An
oral contraceptive must not be supplied from a family planning clinic except on
and in accordance with a prescription given by a registered medical
practitioner.
(3) The
container of an oral contraceptive supplied from a family planning clinic must
be labelled with words describing its contents and with a designation and
address sufficient to identify the family planning clinic from which it was
supplied.
(4) In
this Article, “family planning clinic” means a health centre,
dispensary or clinic which is maintained by any public authority or by a
charity, and at which contraceptive substances are supplied.
30 Storage
of poisons in institutions
(1) In
any institution in which medicines are dispensed in a dispensing or
pharmaceutical department in the charge of a person appointed for that purpose,
all poisons other than those issued for use shall be stored in that department.
(2) In
any institution to which paragraph (1) does not apply, all poisons other
than those issued for use shall be stored –
(a) in the charge of a person
appointed for the purpose by the governing body or person in control of the
institution;
(b) otherwise than on an
open shelf, unless the container of the poison is distinguishable by touch from
containers of substances other than poisons kept on the same premises; and
(c) in the case of
substances included in Schedule 1 shall be stored either in a cupboard or
drawer or on a shelf reserved solely for the storage of poisons.
(3) In
every institution every substance included in Schedule 1 kept in a ward
shall be stored in a cupboard reserved solely for the storage of poisons and
other dangerous substances.
(4) All
places in which poisons are kept in an institution shall be inspected at
intervals of not more than 3 months by a pharmacist or other person appointed
for the purpose by the governing body or person in control of the institution.
Miscellaneous
31 Manufacture of pharmaceutical preparations
In all establishments in
which pharmaceutical preparations containing any poison are manufactured for
the purpose of the internal treatment of human ailments, the preparation must
be manufactured by, or under the supervision of, a registered pharmacist or a person
having one of the following qualifications in chemistry –
(a) the Fellowship of the
Royal Institute of Chemistry;
(b) the Associateship of
the Royal Institute of Chemistry:
Provided that this Rule
shall not apply to –
(i) the
manufacture by, or under the supervision of, a registered medical practitioner
of preparations containing insulin, the active principles of pituitary,
suprarenal or thyroid glands or the salts of the active principles of thyroid
gland,
(ii) the
manufacture of any preparation by, or under the supervision of, a person who,
for a period of at least 3 years before 1 October 1964, was continuously
engaged in the manufacture of pharmaceutical preparations containing poisons
and prepared for the internal treatment of human ailments, and has furnished to
the Minister an affidavit to that effect.
32 Form
of application for registration of sets of premises in register of premises,
and form of register
The register of premises
shall be in the form set out in Schedule 9.
33 Form of application for entry of name in list kept in pursuance of Article 11(1)
of the Law, and form of list
(1) Every
application made to the Minister for the entry of a name in the list kept in
pursuance of Article 11(1) of the Law, being a list of persons entitled,
subject to the provisions of the Law and of this Order, to sell poisons
included in Part 2 of the Poisons List, shall be made in the form set out
in Schedule 10 to this Order.
(2) The
said list shall be in the form set out in Schedule 11 to this Order.
34 Certificates of persons to whom poisons may be sold
(1) A
certificate given for the purposes of Article 9(2)(a) of the Law, being a certificate certifying a person to be a person
to whom a poison may properly be sold, shall be in the form, and shall contain
the particulars, set out in Schedule 12 to this Order.
(2) All
householders are authorized to give such certificates as aforesaid:
Provided that a
certificate given by a householder who is not known to the seller of the poison
to be a responsible person of good character shall not be a sufficient
certificate for the purposes of the said sub-paragraph (a) unless it is endorsed in the
manner specified in Schedule 12 by a Connétable or Centenier of the
parish in which the householder resides.
(3) On
any sale of a poison upon such a certificate as aforesaid, the certificate
shall be retained by the seller.
35 Form of record of sales
The particulars of sales
of poisons which are required by Article 9(2)(b) of the Law to be entered
in a book shall be entered in the form set out in Schedule 13 to this Order.
36 Preservation
of records
All books kept for the
purposes of Part 3 of the Law shall be preserved on the premises on which
the sales recorded therein were made for a period of 2 years from the date on
which the last entry was made therein.
37 Citation
This Order may be cited
as the Poisons (General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968.
Schedule 1[21]
(Articles 6, 7, 8,
12, 13, 20, 24, 27, 28, and 30)
Substances included in the Poisons List to which special
restrictions apply unless exempted by Article 8
Acetorphine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Acetyldihydrocodeine; its salts.
Alcuronium chloride.
Alkaloids, the following; their
quaternary compounds; any salts, simple or complex, of any substance falling
within the following –
Aconite, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.02% of the alkaloids of aconite.
Atropine except substances
containing less than 0.15% of atropine or not more than 1% of atropine
methonitrate.
Belladonna, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.15% of the alkaloids of belladonna calculated
as hyoscyamine.
Brucine except substances
containing less than 0.2% of brucine.
Calabar bean, alkaloids of.
Coca, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.1% of the alkaloids of coca.
Cocaine except substances
containing less than 0.1% of cocaine.
Codeine; its esters and ethers;
except substances containing less than 1.5% of codeine.
Coniine except substances
containing less than 0.1% of coniine.
Cotarnine except substances
containing less than 0.2% of cotarnine.
Curare, alkaloids of; curare
bases.
Ecgonine; its esters and ethers;
except substances containing less than the equivalent of 0.1% of ecgonine.
Emetine except substances
containing less than 1% of emetine.
Ephedrine; its optical insomers;
except when contained in liquid preparations or preparations not intended for
the internal treatment of human ailments and except solid preparations
containing less than 10% of ephedrine or its optical isomers otherwise than in
an inert diluent.
Gelsemium, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.1% of the alkaloids of gelsemium.
Homatropine except substances
containing less than 0.15% of homatropine.
Hyoscine except substances
containing less than 0.15% of hyoscine.
Hyoscyamine except substances
containing less than 0.15% of hyoscyamine.
Jaborandi, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.5% of the alkaloids of jaborandi.
Lobelia, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.5% of the alkaloids of lobelia.
Morphine; its esters and ethers;
except substances containing less than 0.2% of morphine calculated as anhydrous
morphine.
Nicotine.
Papaverine except substances
containing less than 1% of papaverine.
Pomegranate, alkaloids of,
except substances containing less than 0.5% of the alkaloids of pomegranate.
Quebracho, alkaloids of.
Sabadilla, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 1% of the alkaloids of sabadilla.
Solanaceous alkaloids, not
otherwise included in this Schedule, except substances containing less than
0.15% of solanaceous alkaloids calculated as hyoscyamine.
Stavesacre, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.2% of the alkaloids of stavesacre.
Strychnine, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 0.2% of strychnine.
Thebaine except substances
containing less than 1% of thebaine.
Veratrum, alkaloids of, except
substances containing less than 1% of the alkaloids of veratrum.
Yohimba, alkaloids of.
Allylisopropylacetylurea.
Allylprodine; its salts.
Alphameprodine; its salts.
Alphaprodine; its salts.
Aluminium phosphide
Amino-alcohols esterified with
benzoic acid, phenylacetic acid, phenylpropionic acid, cinnamic acid or the
derivatives of these acids, except substances containing less than 10% of
esterified amino-alcohols and except procaine when in a preparation containing
any substance to which the Therapeutic Substances (Prevention of Misuse)
(Jersey) Law 1953, for the time being applies; their salts.
Anileridine; its salts.
Antimonial poisons except
substances containing less than the equivalent of 1% of antimony trioxide.
Apomorphine; its salts; except
substances containing less than 0.2% of apomorphine.
Arsenical poisons except substances
containing less than the equivalent of 0.01% of arsenic trioxide and except
dentrifices containing less than 0.5% of acetarsol.
Barbituric acid; its salts;
derivatives of barbituric acid; their salts; compounds of barbituric acid, its
salts, its derivatives, their salts, with any other substance.
Barium, salts of.
Benzethidine; its salts.
Benzoylmorphine; its salts.
Benzylmorphine; its salts.
Betameprodine; its salts.
Betaprodine; its salts.
Busulphan; its salts.
Cantharidin except substances
containing less than 0.1% of cantharidin.
Cantharidates except substances
containing less than the equivalent of 0.01% of cantharidin.
Carbachol.
Carperidine; its salts.
Chloroform, except substances
containing not more than 5% of chloroform or when in preparations not intended
for the internal treatment of human ailments.
Chloropicrin
Clonitazene; its salts.
4-Cyano-2-dimethylamino-4,
4-diphenylbutane; its salts.
4-Cyano-1-methyl-4-phenylpiperidine;
its salts.
Dehydroemetine; its salts.
Demecarium bromide.
Desomorphine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Dextromethorphan; its salts; except
substances containing less than 1.5% of dextromethorphan.
Dextromoramide; its salts.
Dextrorphan; its salts.
Diacetylmorphine; its salts.
Diacetylnalorphine; its salts.
Diampromide; its salts.
Digitalis, glycosides and other
active principles of, except substances containing less than one unit of activity
(as defined in the British Pharmacopaeia) in 2 g of the substance.
Dihydrocodeine; its salts (except
in single dose non-parenteral preparations with a maximum strength of 1.5%,
weight in weight, of dihydrocodeine and a maximum dose of 10 mg)
Dihydrocodeinone; its salts.
Dihydromorphine; its salts; its
esters; their salts.
Dimenoxadole; its salts.
Dimepheptanol; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their
compounds with a metal or a base; except winter washes containing not more than
the equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinitronaphthols; dinitrophenols:
dinitrothymols.
Dinosam; its compounds with a metal
or a base.
Dinoseb; its compounds with a metal
or a base.
Dioxaphetyl butyrate; its salts.
Diphenoxylate; its salts; except
(a) pharmaceutical preparations in solid or
liquid form containing not more than 2.5 mg of diphenoxylate calculated as base
and not less than 25 microgrammes of atropine calculated as atropine sulphate
per dosage unit and containing no other substance to which any Part of the Dangerous
Drugs (Jersey) Law 1954, applies; and
(b) liquid
preparations containing 0.5 mg diphenoxylate hydrochloride, 0.005 mg atropine
sulphate, 0.16 ml ethylalcohol, 0.002 ml imitation cherry flavour, 0.45 ml glycerine,
0.4 ml sorbital solution (70%), 0.01 mg red dye colour index No. 14700 (F.D.
4C.Red No. 4), 0.0008 ml water.
Dipipanone; its salts.
Disulfiram.
Dithienylallylamines;
dithienylalkylallylamines; their salts.
Dyflos.
Ecothiopate iodine.
Embutramide.
Endosulfan.
Endothal; its salts.
Endrin.
Ethylmorphine; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts; except substances containing less than 0.2% of
ethylmorphine.
Etonitazene; its salts.
Etorphine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Etoxeridine; its salts.
Fentanyl; its salts.
Fluanisone.
Fluoroacetamide; fluoroacetanilide.
Furethidine; its salts.
Gallamine; its salts; its
quaternary compounds.
Guanidines, the
following –
polymethylene diguanidines; di-p-anisyl-p-phenetyl
guanidine.
Hydrocyanic acid except substances
containing less than 0.15%., weight in weight, of hydrocyanic acid (HCN);
cyanides, other than ferrocyanides and ferricyanides, except substances
containing less than the equivalent of 0.1%, weight in weight, of hydrocyanic
acid (HCN).
Hydromorphinol; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Hydromorphone; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Hydroxycinchoninic acids;
derivatives of; their salts; their esters; except substances containing less
than 3% of a hydroxycinchoninic acid or a derivative thereof.
Hydroxypethidine; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Hydroxyurea.
Isomethadone (isoamidone); its
salts.
Ketobemidone; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Laudexium; its salts.
Lead, compounds of, with acids from
fixed oils.
Levomethorphan; its salts.
Levomoramide; its salts.
Levophenacylmorphan; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Levorphanol; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Mannomustine; its salts.
Mebezonium iodide.
Mercaptopurine; its salts;
derivatives of mercaptopurine; their salts.
Mercuric chloride except substances
containing less than 1% of mercuric chloride; mercuric iodide except substances
containing less than 2% of mercuric iodide; nitrates of mercury except substances
containing less than the equivalent of 3%, weight in weight, of mercury (Hg);
potassiomercuric iodides except substances containing less than the equivalent
of 1% of mercuric iodide; organic compounds of mercury except substances, not
being aerosols, containing less than the equivalent of 0.2%, weight in weight,
of mercury (Hg).
Mescaline, and other derivatives of
phenethylamine formed by substitution in the aromatic ring; their salts.
Metazocine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; its salts.
Methadone (amidone); its salts.
Methadyl acetate; its salts.
Methyldesorphine; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Methyldihydromorphine; its salts;
its esters and ethers; their salts.
2-Methyl-3-morplolino-1,
1-diphenylpropanecarboxylic acid; its salts; its esters.
1-Methyl-4-phenylpiperidine-4-carboxylic
acid; esters of; their salts.
Metopon; its salts; its esters and
ethers; their salts.
Monofluoroacetic acid; its salts.
Morpheridine; its salts.
Mustine and any other N -substituted derivative of di-(2-chloroethyl)
amine; their salts.
Myrophine; its salts.
Nalorphine; its salts.
Nicocodine; its salts.
m-Nitrophenol; o-nitrophenol; p-nitrophenol.
Noracymethadol; its salts.
Norcodeine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Norlevorphanol; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
Normethadone; its salts.
Normorphine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Norpipanone.
Nux Vomica except substances
containing less than 0.2% of strychnine.
Opium except substances containing
less than 0.2% of morphine calculated as anhydrous morphine.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds of fentin.
Ouabain.
Oxycodone; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Oxymorphone; its salts.
Paraquat, salts of
Phenacemide.
Phenadoxone; its salts.
Phenampromide; its salts.
Phenazocine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Phencyclidine; its salts.
Phemorphan; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Phenoperidine; its salts; its
esters and ethers; their salts.
2-Phenylcinchoninic acid;
2-salicylcinchoninic acid; their salts; their esters.
4-Phenylpiperidine-4-carboxylic
acid ethyl ester; its salts.
Pholcodine; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts; except substances containing less than 1.5% of
pholcodine.
Phosphorus compounds, the
following –
Amiton.
Azinphos-ethyl.
Azinphos-methyl.
Chlorfenvinphos except sheep
dips containing not more than 10%, weight in weight, of chlorfenvinphos.
Demeton-O.
Demeton-S.
Demeton-O-methyl.
Demeton-S-methyl.
Dichlorvos.
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate.
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl
phosphate.
Dimefox.
Disulfoton.
Ethion.
Ethyl-p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate.
Mazidox.
Mecarbam.
Medthidathion
Mevinphos.
Mipafox.
Oxydemeton-methyl.
Parathion.
Phenkapton.
Phorate.
Phosphamidon.
Schradan.
Sulfotep.
TEPP
(HETP).
Thionazin.
Triphosphoric
pentadimethylamide.
Vamidothion.
Pricrotoxin.
Piminodine; its salts.
Piritramide; its salts.
Polymethylenebistrimethylammonium
salts.
Proheptazine; its salts.
Propoxyphene; its salts.
Racemethorphan; its salts.
Racemoramide; its salts.
Racemorphan; its salts; its esters
and ethers; their salts.
Savin, oil of.
Strophanthus, glycosides of.
Thallium, salts of
Thebacon; its salts.
Tretamine; its salts.
Triaziquone.
Trimeperidine; its salts.
Zinc phosphide.
Schedule 2
(Article 5)
Poisons exempted from labelling provisions when sold or supplied in
certain circumstances
Alkali fluorides.
Ammonia.
Antimony, chlorides of; oxides of
antimony; sulphides of antimony; antimonates; antimonites.
Chloroform.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC).
Dinitronaphthols; dinitrophenols.
Formaldehyde.
Formic acid.
Glyceryl trinitrate.
Hydrochloric acid.
Hydrofluoric acid; sodium
silicofluoride.
Lead acetates; compounds of lead
with acids from fixed oils.
Mercuric chloride; mercuric iodide;
organic compounds of mercury.
Mercury, oxides of; nitrates of
mercury.
Nitric acid.
Nitrobenzene.
m-Nitrophenol; o-nitrophenol; p-nitrophenol.
Oxalic acid; metallic oxalates.
Phenols; compounds of phenol with a
metal.
Phosphorus, yellow.
Picric acid.
Potassium hydroxide.
Sodium hydroxide.
Sulphuric acid.
Schedule 3
(Article 9)
Articles exempted from the provisions of the Law and of this Order
GROUP 1
GENERAL EXEMPTIONS
Adhesives; anti-fouling
compositions; builders’ materials; ceramics; distempers; electrical
valves; enamels; explosives; fillers; fireworks; fluorescent lamps; glazes;
glue; inks; lacquer solvents; loading materials; matches; motor fuels and
lubricants; paints other than pharmaceutical paints; photographic paper;
pigments; plastics; propellants; rubber; varnishes; vascular plants and their
seeds.
GROUP 2[22]
SPECIAL EXEMPTIONS
Poison
|
|
Substance or article in which
exempted
|
Acetanilide; alkyl acetanilides
|
|
Substances not being preparations for the treatment of human
ailments.
|
Alkaloids, the
following –
|
|
|
Brucine
|
|
Surgical spirit containing not
more than 0.015%
of brucine.
|
Emetine
|
|
Ipecacuanha; extracts and tinctures of ipecacuanha; substances
containing less than 0.05% of emetine.
|
Ephedra, alkaloids of
|
|
Substances containing less than 1% of the alkaloids of ephedra.
|
Jaborandi, alkaloids of
|
|
Substances containing less than 0.025% of the alkaloids of
jaborandi.
|
Lobelia, alkaloids of
|
|
Preparations for the relief of asthma in the form of cigarettes,
smoking mixtures or fumigants; substances containing less than 0.1% of the
alkaloids of lobelia.
|
Nicotine
|
|
Tobacco; preparations containing not more than 7.5% of nicotine,
weight in weight, aerosols containing not more than 0.2% of nicotine, weight
in weight.
|
Pomegranate, alkaloids of
|
|
Pomegranate bark.
|
Solanaceous alkaloids
|
|
Stramonium contained in preparations for the relief of asthma in
the form of cigarettes, smoking mixtures or fumigants.
|
Stavesacre, alkaloids of
|
|
Soaps; ointments; lotions for external use.
|
p-Aminobenzenesulphonamide; its
salts; derivatives of p-aminobenzenesulphonamide having any of the hydrogen
atoms of the p-amino group or of the sulphonamide group substituted by
another radical; their salts
|
|
Feeding stuffs containing not more than 0.5% of total
sulphonamides; sulphaquinoxaline when contained, to a concentration not
exceeding 0.5%, in preparations for the destruction of rats and mice.
|
Ammonia
|
|
Substances not being solutions of ammonia or preparations
containing solutions of ammonia; substances containing less than 5%., weight
in weight of ammonia (NH3); refrigerators; smelling bottles.
|
Androgenic, oestrogenic
and progestational substances, the following –
|
|
Preparations intended for external application only, except
preparations containing not more than 4mg of oestrogenic substance per 100g
of inert substance; feeding stuffs containing hexoestrol or stilboestrol or
both and not containing any other androgenic, oestrogenic or progestational
substance.
|
Bensoestrol
|
|
Derivatives of stilbene, dibenzyl or naphthalene with
oestrogenic activity; their esters
|
|
Steroid compounds with androgenic or oestrogenic or
progestational activity; their esters
|
|
|
Anti-histamine
substances, the following; their salts; their molecular
compounds –
|
|
Preparations intended for external application only and
preparations containing not more than 1% of anti-histamine substances for
application in the nose or eye.
|
Antazoline
|
Bromodiphenhydramine
|
Buclizine
|
Carbinoxamine
|
Chlorcyclizine
|
Chlorpheniramine
|
Cinnarizine
|
Clemizole
|
Cyclizine
|
3-Di-n-butylaminomethy1-4, 5,
6-trihydroxyphthalide
|
Diphenhydramine
|
Diphenylpyraline
|
Doxylamine
|
Isothipendyl
|
Mebhydrolin
|
Meclozine
|
Phenindamine
|
Pheniramine
|
Phenyltoloxamine
|
Promethazine
|
Pyrrobutamine
|
Thenalidine
|
Tolpropamine
|
Triprolidine
|
Substances being tetra-N-substituted-N- derivatives of
ethylenediamine or propylenediamine
|
Antimony, chlorides of
|
|
Polishes.
|
Arsenical poisons
|
|
Pyrites ores or sulphuric acid containing arsenical poisons as
natural impurities; poultry or pig feeding stuffs containing not more than
0.005% of 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylarsonic acid and not containing any other
arsenical poison.
|
Barbituric acid; its salts; derivatives of barbituric acid;
their salts; compounds and barbituric acid; its salts; its derivatives; their
salts, with any other substance
|
|
Self-heating preparations in aerosol dispensers intended for
external application only, containing 1, 5-diethyl-2-thio-4,
6-pyrimidinedione and not containing any other substance mentioned opposite
hereto in the first column.
|
Barium, salts of
|
|
Witherite other than finely ground witherite; barium carbonate
bonded to charcoal for case hardening; fire extinguishers containing barium
chloride.
|
Carbarsone
|
|
Poultry feeding stuffs containing not more than 0.0375% of
carbarsone.
|
Chloroform
|
|
Substances containing less than 1% of chloroform; solid
preparations; toothpaste.
|
Creosote obtained from wood
|
|
Substances containing less than 50% of creosote obtained from
wood.
|
Diamines, the following; their salts – phenylene
diamines; tolylene diamines; other alkylated-benzene diamines
|
|
Substances other than preparations for the dyeing of hair.
|
Dimitrocresols (DNOC); their compounds with a metal or a base.
|
|
Substances being neither preparations for the treatment of human
ailments nor preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Dinitrophenols
|
|
Substances not being preparations for the treatment of human
ailments.
|
Dinosam; its compounds with a metal or a base
|
|
Substances not being preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Dinoseb; its compounds with a metal or a base
|
|
Substances not being preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Diperodon; its salts
|
|
Preparations intended for external application only, containing
not more than 1% of diperodon, calculated as anhydrous base.
|
Disulfiram
|
|
Substances not being preparations for the treatment of human
ailments.
|
Formaldehyde
|
|
Substances containing less than 5%, weight in weight, of
formaldehyde (H.CHO); photographic glazing or hardening solutions.
|
Formic acid
|
|
Substances containing less than 5%, weight in weight, of formic
acid (H.COOH).
|
Hexachlorophane
|
|
Animal medicines for oral administration to sheep and cattle for
the treatment of liver fluke; all other animal medicines (except aerosols)
containing up to 0.75% of hexachlorophane; soaps and shampoos for animal use
containing up to 2% of hexachlorophane
|
Hydrochloric acid
|
|
Substances containing less than 9%, weight in weight, of
hydrochloric acid (HC1).
|
Hydrocyanic acid
|
|
Preparations of wild cherry.
|
Lead acetate
|
|
Substances containing less than 4% of lead acetate.
|
Lead, compounds of
|
|
Machine-spread plasters.
|
Mercuric chloride
|
|
Batteries.
|
Mercuric chloride; mercuric iodide; organic compounds of mercury
|
|
Dressings on seeds or bulbs.
|
Mercury, nitrates of
|
|
Ointments containing less than the equivalent of 3%, weight in
weight, of mercury (Hg).
|
Mercury, oxides of
|
|
Canker and wound paints (for trees) containing not more than 3%,
weight in weight, of yellow mercuric oxide.
|
Mescaline; its salts
|
|
Living plants.
|
Nitric acid
|
|
Substances containing less than 9%, weight in weight, of nitric
acid (HNO3).
|
Nitrobenzene
|
|
Substances containing less than 0.1% of nitro-benzene; soaps
containing less than 1% of nitrobenzene; polishes.
|
p-Nitrobenzyl cyanide
|
|
Photographic solutions containing less than the equivalent of
0.1%, weight in weight, of hydrocyanic acid (HCN).
|
p-Nitrophenol
|
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture containing
not more than 0.5% of p-nitrophenol as preservative.
|
Organo-tin compounds,
the following –
|
|
|
Compounds of fentin
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Oxalic acid;
metallic oxalates
|
|
Laundry blue; polishes; cleaning powders or scouring products,
containing the equivalent of not more than 10% of oxalic acid dihydrate.
|
Paraquat,
salts of
|
|
Preparations in pellet form containing not more than 5% of salts
of paraquat calculated as paraquat ion.
|
Phenols
|
|
Carvacrol
|
|
|
creosote obtained from coal tar;
|
|
|
essential oils in which phenols occur naturally;
|
|
|
medicines containing less than 1% of phenols;
|
|
|
nasal sprays, mouth washes, pastilles, lozenges, capsules,
pessaries, ointments or suppositories containing less than 2.5% of phenols;
|
|
|
smelling bottles;
|
|
|
soaps for washing;
|
|
|
solid substances, other than pastilles, lozenges, capsules,
pessaries, ointments and suppositories, containing less than 60% of phenols;
|
|
|
tar (coal or wood), crude or refined;
|
|
|
p-tertiary-amylphenol;
|
|
|
tertiary-butylcresol;
|
|
|
p-tertiary-butylphenol;
|
|
|
p-(1, 1, 3, 3-tetramethylbutyl)
phenol
|
|
|
thymol.
|
Phenyl mercuric salts
|
|
Toilet, cosmetic and therapeutic preparations containing not
more than 0.01% of phenyl mercuric salts as a preservative; antiseptic
dressings on tooth-brushes; in textiles containing not more than 0.01% of
phenyl mercuric salts as a bacteriostat and fungicide.
|
Phosphoric acid
|
|
Substances containing phosphoric acid, not being descaling
preparations containing more than 50%, weight in weight, of orthophosphoric
acid.
|
Phosphorus, compounds,
the following –
|
|
|
Amiton
Azinphos-ethyl
Azinphos-methyl
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Chlorfenvinphos
|
|
Substances other than preparations not being granular
preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Demeton-O
Demeton-S
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Dichlorvos
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture, not being preparations in –
|
(a)
|
impregnated materials containing not more than 20%, weight
in weight, of dichlorvos in a resinous or plastic base, or
|
(b)
|
aerosols containing not more than 0.4%, weight in weight of
dichlorvos; or
|
(c)
|
thermal vaporisers containing not more than 30%, weight in
weight, of dichlorvos in an impregnated, fixed, rigid and porous base.
|
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl phosphorothionate
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate
Dimefox
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Disulfoton
|
|
Substances other than preparations, not being granular
preparations, for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Ethion
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
|
phenylphosphonothionate
|
Mazidox
|
Mecarbam
|
Mevinphos
|
Mipafox
|
Oxydemeton-methyl
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or,
except in aerosol canisters containing not more than 0.25%, weight in weight,
of oxydemeton-methyl, for use in horticulture.
|
Parathion
|
|
Substances other than preparations, not being granular
preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Phenkapton
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Phorate
|
|
Substances other than preparations, not being granular
preparations, for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Phosphamidon
|
|
Substances other than preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
|
Schradan
|
Sulfotep
|
TEPP (HETP)
|
Thionazin
|
Triphosphoric penta-dimethylamide
|
Vamidothion
|
Picric acid
|
|
Substances containing less than 5% of picric acid.
|
Podophyllum resin
|
|
Preparations containing not more than 1.5%, weight in weight, of
podophyllum resin.
|
Potassium hydroxide
|
|
Substances containing less than 12% of potassium hydroxide;
accumulators; batteries.
|
Procaine
|
|
Feeding stuffs containing any substance to which Part II of the Therapeutic Substances Act 1956 of the United Kingdom for the time being
applies.
|
Sodium ethyl mercurithiosali-cylate
|
|
Therapeutic substances containing less than 0.1% of sodium ethyl
mercurithiosalicylate as a preservative.
|
Sodium fluoride
|
|
Substances containing less than 3% of sodium fluoride as a
preservative; dentifrices containing not more than 0.3% of sodium fluoride;
mouth wash tablets containing not more than 0.2% of sodium fluoride; and
liquid mouth washes containing not more than 0.05% thereof.
|
Sodium hydroxide
|
|
Substances containing less than 12% of sodium hydroxide.
|
Sodium nitrite
|
|
Substances other than preparations containing more than 0.1% of
sodium nitrite for the destruction of rats and mice.
|
Sodium silicofluoride
|
|
Substances containing less than 3% of sodium silicofluoride as a
preservative.
|
Sulphuric acid
|
|
Substances containing less than 9%, weight in weight, of
sulphuric acid (H2SO4); accumulators; batteries and sealed containers in
which sulphuric acid is packed together with car batteries for use in those
batteries; fire extinguishers.
|
In Group 2 in this Schedule
the expression “granular preparation” in relation to a poison means
a preparation –
(a) which
consists of absorbent mineral or synthetic solid particles impregnated with the
poison, the size of the particles being such that not more than 4%., weight in
weight, of the preparation is capable of passing a sieve with a mesh of 250
microns, and not more than 1%, a sieve with a mesh of 150 microns;
(b) which
has an apparent density of not less than 0.4 g per ml if compacted without
pressure; and
(c) not
more than 12% of which, weight in weight, consists of the poison.
Schedule 4[23]
(Article 5, 10,
11)
Substances required to be sold by retail only upon a prescription given
by a registered medical practitioner, registered dentist or registered
veterinary surgeon
PART A
Alcuronium chloride.
Allylisopropylacetylurea.
Barbituric acid; its salts;
derivatives of barbituric acid; their salts; compounds of barbituric acid, its
salts, its derivatives, their salts, with any other substance.
Busulphan; its salts.
Demecarium bromide.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their
compounds with a metal or a base, except preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
Dinitronaphthols; dinitrophenols;
dinitrothymols.
Disulfiram.
Dithienylallylamines;
dithienylalkylallylamines; their salts; except diethylthiambutene,
dimethylthiambutene and ethylmethylthiambutene.
Gallamine; its salts; its
quaternary compounds.
Hydroxyurea.
Mannomustine; its salts.
Mercaptopurine; its salts;
derivatives of mercaptopurine; their salts.
Mustine and any other N-substituted derivatives of
di-(2-chloroethyl)amine; their salts.
Phenacemide.
Phencyclidine; its salts.
2-Phenylcinchoninic acid;
2-salicylcinchoninic acid; their salts; their esters.
Polymethylenebistrimethylammonium
salts.
Tretamine; its salts.
Triaziquone.
PART B[24]
Acebutolol
Hydrochloride
Acemetacin
Acetanilide; alkyl acetanilides
Acetarsol
Acetazolamide
Acetohexamide
Acetylcarbromal
Acetylcysteine
Acitretin
Aclarubicin Hydrochloride
Acrivastine (except when sold or
supplied in a container containing not more than 240 mg acrivastine and
labelled to show a maximum daily dosage of 24 mg.)
Actinomycin C
Actinomycin D
Acyclovir (except in the form of a
cream for the treatment of cold sores.)
Adenosine
Albendazole
Alclofenac
Aldesleukin
Alfacalcidol
Alfentanyl
Alfuzocin Hydrochloride
Allopurinol
Alphadolone Acetate
Alphaxalone
Alprenolol
Alprenolol Hydrochloride
Alprostadil
Alteplase
Alverine Citrate
Amantadine Hydrochloride
Amethocaine (except in preparations
for non-parenteral use other than those for local opthalmic use.)
Amidopyrine; its salts; amidopyrine
sulphonates; their salts, p-Aminobenzenesulphonamide;
its salts; derivatives of p-aminobenzenesulphonamide
having any of the hydrogen atoms of the p-animo
group or of the sulphonamide group substituted by another radical; their salts;
except when contained in ointments or surgical dressings or in preparations for
the prevention and treatment of diseases in poultry.
Amiloride Hydrochloride
Aminocaproic Acid
Aminoglutethimide
Aminorex; its salts.
Amiodarone Hydrochloride
Amlodipine
Amitriptyline; its salts
Amodiaquine Hydrochloride
Amorolfine Hydrochloride
Amoxapine
Amsacrine
Androgenic, oestrogenic and progestational
substances, the following –
Benzoestrol
Derivatives of stilbene,
dibenzyl or naphthalene with oestrogenic activity; their esters
Steroid compounds with
androgenic or oestrogenic or progestational activity; their esters
Anistreplase
Astemizole (except when sold or
supplied in a container containing not more than 100 mg astemizole for the
treatment of hay-fever in adults or in children over the age of 12 years and
with a maximum daily dose of 10 mg.)
Atenolol
Atracurium Besylate
Auranofin
Azacyclonol; its salts
Azapropazone
Azathioprine
Azithromycin
Aztreonam
Baclofen
Bambuterol Hydrochloride
Benactyzine; its salts
Benapryzine
Benperidol
Benserazide
Benzhexol; its salts
Benztropine and its homologues;
their salts
Betahistine dihydrochloride
Betaxolol Hydrochloride
Bethanidine Sulphate
Bezafibrate
Bisoprolol Fumarate
Bleomycin
Bretylium Tosylate
Bromocryptine Mesylate
Bromvaletone
Budesonide
Bumetanide
Buserelin Acetate
Buspirone Hydrochloride
Calcipotriol
Calcitonin
Captodiame; its salts
Captopril
Caramiphen; its salts; except
tablets containing not more than the equivalent of 7.5 mg of caramiphen base,
and liquid preparations containing not more than the equivalent of 0.1% of
caramiphen base
Carbamazepine
Carbenoxolone Sodium (except when
sold or supplied in the form of a pellet, gel or granules, for the treatment of
mild oral or perioral lesions.)
Carbidopa
Carbimazole
Carbocisteine
Carboplatin
Carboprost
Carbromal
Carisoprodol
Carteolol
Hydrochloride
Cefamandole
Cefixime
Cefodizime
Proxetil
Ceftazidime
Ceftriaxone
Ceftizoxime Sodium
Celiprolol
Cetirizine Dihydrochloride (except
when sold or supplied in a container containing not more than 100 mg cetirizine
with a maximum daily dose of 10 mg cetirizine.)
Chenodeoxycholic
Acid
Chloral; its addition and its
condensation products other than alpha-chloralose; their molecular compounds;
except when contained, in the form of chloral hydrate, in preparations intended
for external application only
Chlorambucil
Chlordiazepoxide; its salts
Chlormethiazole; its salts
Chloroquine Sulphate (except when
sold or supplied for the prophylaxis of malaria.)
Chloroquine Phosphate (except when
sold or supplied for the prophylaxis of malaria.)
Chlorothiazide and other
derivatives of benzo-1,2,4-thiadiazine-7-sulphonamide 1, 1-dioxide, whether
hyrdrogenated or not
Chlorphenoxamine; its salts
Chlorphentermine; its salts
Chlorpropamide; its salts
Chlorprothixene and other
derivatives of 9-methylenethiaxanthen; their salts
Chlorthalidone and other
derivatives of o -chlorobenzene sulphonamide
Chorionic Godadotrophin
Cilastatin Sodium
Cilazapril
Cimetidine (except when sold or
supplied for the short-term symptomatic relief of heartburn, dyspepsia and
hyperacidity with a maximum dose of 200 mg and maximum daily dose of 800 mg
for not more than 14 days or for the prophylactic management of nocturnal
heartburn with a maximum dose of 100 mg to be taken once daily at night for a
maximum of 14 days.)
Cinoxacin
Ciprofibrate
Ciprofloxacin
Cisapride
Cisplatin
Clarithromycin
Clenbuterol Hydrochloride
Clofazimine
Clofibrate
Clomiphene Citrate
Clomipramine Hydrochloride
Clonidine Hydrochloride
Clopenthixol Decanoate
Clopenthixol Hydrochloride
Clorexolone
Clorprenaline; its salts; when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Clotrimazole (except for external
use and in the case of vaginal use only for the treatment of vaginal
candidiasis)
Clozapine
Colaspase
Colchicum, alkaloids of; their
salts
Colfosceril
Palmitate
Corticotrophins,
natural and synthetic
Crisantaspase
Cropropamide
Crotethamide
Cyclarbamate.
Cyclofenil
Cyclopentolate
Hydrochloride
Cyclophosphamide
Cyclosporin
Cycrimine;
its salts
Cyproterone
Acetate
Cytarabine
Dacarbazine
Dalteparin
Sodium
Danazol
Danthron
Dantrolene
Sodium
Dapsone
Daunorubicin Hydrochloride
Debrisoquine Sulphate
Desferrioxamine Mesylate
Desipramine; its salts
Diazepam and other compounds
containing the chemical structure of dihydro-1, 4-benzodiazepine substituted to
any degree; their salts
Diazoxide
Diclofenac Sodium
Dicyclomine Hydrochloride (except
in preparations for internal use with a maximum dose of 10 mg and maximum daily
dose of 60 mg.)
Diflunisal
Diltiazem Hydrochloride
Diniprost
Diphenoxylate and its salts
contained in (a) pharmaceutical preparations
in solid or liquid form containing not more than 2.5 mg of diphenoxylate calculated
as base and not less than 25 microgrammes of atropine calculated as atropine
sulphate per dosage unit and containing no other substance to which any Part of
the Dangerous Drugs Act 1965 of the United Kingdom applies or (b) liquid preparations containing 0.5 mg diphenoxylate
hydrochloride, 0.005 mg atropine sulphate, 0.16 ml ethyl alcohol, 0.002 ml imitation
cherry flavour, 0.45 ml glycerine, 0.4 ml sorbital solution (70%), 0.01 mg red
dye colour index No. 14700 (F.D.4C. Red No. 4), 0.0008 ml water
Dipivefrin Hydrochloride
Disopyramide
Distigmine Bromide
Domperidone Maleate
Dobutamine Hydrochloride
Dopamine Hydrochloride
Dopexamine Hydrochloride
Dothiepin
Doxapram Hydrochloride
Doxazocin Mesylate
Doxepin Hydrochloride
Doxorubicin
Econazole Nitrate (except for
external use and in the case of vaginal use only for the treatment of vaginal
candidiasis.)
Ectylurea
Emylcamate
Enalapril Maleate
Enoxacin
Enoxaparin
Enoximone
Ephedrine; its optical isomers;
their salts; when contained in aerosol dispensers
Epirubicin Hydrochloride
Epoetin Alpha
Epoetin Beta
Epoprostenol Sodium
Ergot, alkaloids of, whether
hydrogenated or not; their homologues; any salt of any substance falling within
this item
Esmolol Hydrochloride
Estramustine Phosphate
Ethacrynic acid; its salts
Ethambutol Hydrochloride
Ethamsylate
Ethchlorvynol
Ethinamate
Ethionamide
Ethoglucid
Ethoheptazine; its salts
Ethosuximide
Ethylnoradrenaline; its salts; when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Etidronate Disodium
Etodolac
Etoposide
Etretinate
Famotidine (except when sold or
supplied for the short term symptomatic relief of heartburn, dyspepsia and
hyperacidity with a maximum dose of 10 mg and a maximum daily dose of 20 mg
for not more than 14 days.)
Felbinac (except in a preparation
for external use with a maximum strength of 3.17%, weight in weight, of
felbinac when sold or supplied in a container containing not more than 30 g)
Felodipine
Fenbufen
Fenfluramine; its salts
Fenofibrate
Fenoprofen Calcium
Fenoterol Hydrobromide
Filgrastim
Finasteride
Flavoxate
Flecainide
Flosequinan
Fluconazole
Fluclorolone Acetonide
Flufenamic acid; its salts; its
esters; their salts
Flumazenil
Fluorouracil
Fluoxetine Hydrochloride
Flupenthixol Decanoate
Flupenthixol Dihydrochloride
Flurbiprofen
Fluspiriline
Flutamide
Fluticasone Propionate
Fluvoxamine
Formestane
Foscarnet Sodium
Fosfestrol Tetrasodium
Fosfomycin Trometamol
Fosinopril Sodium
Frusemide
Gamolenic Acid
Ganciclovir
Gemeprost
Gemfibrozil
Gestrinone
Gliclazide
Glipizide
Gliquidone
Glutethimide; its salts
Glymidine
Gonadorelin
Goserelin Acetate
Granisetron Hydrochloride
Halofantrine
Haloperidol and other 4-substituted
derivatives of N-(3-p-fluoro-benzoylpropyl) piperidine
Heparin
Calcium
Hexachlorophane; aerosols
containing more than 0.1% of hexachlorophane for human and animal use; soap
containing more than 2% of hexachlorophane, any medicinal product containing
more than 0.75% of hexachlorophane
Hexapropymate
Hyaluronidase
Hydralazine Hydrochloride
Hydrazines, benzyl phenethyl or
phenoxyethyl; their α-methyl derivatives; acyl derivatives of any of the
foregoing substances comprised in this item; salts of any compounds comprised
in this item
Hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamines;
their esters or ethers; any salt of any substance falling within this item
Hydroxychloroquine Sulphate
Hydroxyzine; its salts
Ibuprofen (except in a preparation
for topical use)
Idarubicin Hydrochloride
Idoxuridine
Ifosfamide
Imipinem
Imipramine; its salts
Indapamide Hemihydrate
Indomethacin; its salts
Inosine Prabonex
Indoramin Hydrochloride
Interferon Alpha
Interferon Beta
Ipratropium Bromide
Iprindole; its salts
Isocarboxacid
Isoconazole Nitrate (except for
external use and in the case of vaginal use only for the treatment of vaginal
candidiasis.)
Isoetharine;
its salts; when contained in aerosol dispensers
Isoflurane
Isoprenaline; its salts; when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Isotretinoin
Israpidine
Itraconazole
Ketamine Hydrochloride
Ketoprofen (except in a preparation
for topical use with a maximum strength of 2.5% when sold or supplied in a
container or package containing not more than 30 g)
Labetolol
Nydrochloride
Lacidipine
Lamotrigine
Leuprorelin
Acetate
Levobunolol
Hydrochloride
Levodopa
Lisinopril
Lithium Carbonate
Lodoxamine
Trometamol
Lofepramine
Lofexidine
Hydrochloride
Lomefloxin Hydrochloride
Lomustine
Loperamide Hydrochloride (except
when sold or supplied for the treatment of acute diarrhoea in adults and
children over 12 years.)
Loxapine Succinate
Lysuride Maleate
Mazindol
Mebendazole (except when sold or
supplied for the oral treatment of enterobiasis with a maximum dose of 100 mg and
in a container containing not more than 400 mg mebendazole.)
Mebeverine Hydrochloride (except in
preparations for internal use with a maximum dose of 100 mg and a maximum daily
dose of 300 mg.)
Mebutamate
Meclofenoxate; its salts
Mefenamic acid; its salts; its
esters; their salts
Mefloquine Hydrochloride
Melphalan
Menotrophin
Mephenesin; its esters
Meprobamate
Mesalazine
Mesna
Metaraminol Tartrate
Metaxalone
Metformin; its salts
Methaqualone; its salts
Methixene; its salts
Methocarbamol
Methotrexate
Methoxamine Hydrochloride (except
in nasal spray or drops not containing liquid paraffin and not exceeding a
concentration of 0.25%)
Methoxsalen
Methoxyphenamine; its salts; when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Methylaminoheptane; its salts, when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Methyldopa
Methylpentynol; its esters and
other derivatives
α-Methylphenethylamine;
β-methylphenethylamine and α-ethylphenethylamine; any synthetic
compound structurally derived from any of those substances by substitution in
the aliphatic part or by ring closure therein (or by both such substitution and
such closure) or by substitution in the aromatic ring (with or without
substitution at the nitrogen atom), except ephedrine and its optical isoners, N-substituted derivatives, fenfluramine, hydroxyamphetamine,
methoxyphenamine, phenyl-propanolamine, pholedrine and prenylamine; any salt of
any substance falling within this item
Methyprylone
Metipranolol
Metobronitol
Metoclopramide; its salts
Metolazone
Metoprolol
Metronidazole
Metyrapone
Mexiletine
Hydrochloride
Mianserin Hydrochloride
Miconazole
Miconazole Nitrate (except for
external use and in the case of vaginal use only for the treatment of vaginal
candidiasis.)
Mifepristone
Milrinone Lactate
Minoxidil
Misoprostil
Mithramycin
Mitomycin C
Mitopodozide; its salts
Mitozantrone Hydrochloride
Mivacurium Chloride
Moclobemide
Molgramostim
Mometasone Furoate
Mupirocin
Nabilone
Nabumetone
Nadolol
Nafarelin Acetate
Naftidrofuryl Oxalate
Naloxone Hydrochloride
Naltrexone Hydrochloride
Naproxen
Natamycin
Nedocromil Sodium
Nefopam Hydrochloride
Nicardipine Hydrochloride
Nifedipine
Nikethamide
Nimodipine
Niridazole
Nitrendipine
Nitrofurantoin
Nizatidine
Nomifensine Hydrogen Maleate
Norfloxacin
Nortryptyline; its salts
Noxythiolin
Octreotide
Ofloxacin
Olsalazine Sodium
Omeprazole
Ondansetron Hydrochloride
Orciprenaline; its salts; when
contained in aerosol dispensers
Orphenadrine; its salts
Oxaprozin
Oxethazaine (except when sold or
supplied in a container containing not more than 400 mg oxethazaine and
labelled to show a maximum dose of 10 mg and a maximum daily dose of 30 mg oxethazaine)
Oxitropium Bromide
Oxprenolol Hydrochloride
Oxybutynin Hydrochloride
Oxypertine Hydrochloride
Oxyphenbutazone
Oxytocins, natural and synthetic
Pamidronate Disodium
Pancuronium Bromide
Paraldehyde
Paramethadione
Pargyline; its salts
Paroxetine
Pemoline; its salts
Pentamidine Isethionate
Pentazocine; its salts
Pergolide Mesylate
Pericyazine
Perindopril
Phenacetin (except in substances
containing less than 0.1% weight in weight, of phenacetin and except where used
as a veterinary drug)
Phenaglycodol
Phenbutrazate
Phenelzine Sulphate
Phenetidylphenacetin
Phenformin; its salts
Phenothiazine, derivatives of;
their salts; except dimethoxanate, its salts and promethazine, its salts and
molecular compounds
Phenylbutazone; its salts
5-Phenylhydantoin;
its alkyl and aryl derivatives; their salts
Pimozide
Pindolol
Pirbuterol
Acetate
Pirbuterol
Hydrochloride
Pirenzipine Hydrochloride
Piretanide
Piroxicam (except in a preparation
for external use with a maximum strength of 0.5%, weight in weight, of
piroxicam when sold or supplied in a container containing not more than 30 g)
Pituitary gland, the active
principles of, other than corticotrophins, oxytocins and vasopressins; except
when contained in inhalants or in preparations intended for external
application only
Pizotifen Hydrogen Maleate
Plicamycin
Potassium Canrenoate
Potassium Clorazepate
Practolol
Pralidoxime Mesylate
Pravastatin Sodium
Prazocin Hydrochloride
Primidone
Probenecid
Probucol
Procainamide; its salts
Procarbazine; its salts
Procyclidine; its salts
Promoxolan
Propafenone Hydrochloride
Propanidid
Propantheline Bromide (except when
sold or supplied for internal use with a maximum dose of 15 mg and maximum
daily dose of 45 mg.)
Propofol
Propranolol Hydrochloride
Propylhexedrine; its salts; except
when contained in inhalers
Propylthiouracil
Protamine Sulphate
Prothionamide
Prothipendyl; its salts
Protriptyline
Hydrochloride
Pyrazinamide
Quinapril
Quinethazone
Quinidine
Bisulphate
Quinidine
Sulphate
Ramipril
Ranitidine Hydrochloride (except
when sold or supplied for the short-term symptomatic relief of heartburn,
dyspepsia or hyperacidity in a container labelled to show a maximum dose of 75 mg
and a maximum daily dose of 300 mg for not more than 14 days’ treatment)
Rauwolfia, alkaloids of; their
salts; derivatives of the alkaloids of rauwolfia; their salts
Razoxane
Remoxipride Hydrochloride
Rimiterol Hydrobromide
Ritodrine Hydrochloride
Salbutamol
Salcatonin
Salmeterol
Selegiline
Sertraline
Simvastatin
Sodium Aurothiomalate
Sodium Clodronate
Sodium Cromoglycate (except in a
preparation manufactured, sold or supplied for the treatment of acute seasonal
allergic rhinitis in the form of an eye ointment or in the form of aqueous eye
drops or in a preparation manufactured, sold or supplied for use by being
administered through the nose)
Sodium Hyaluronate
Sodium Valproate
Somatorelin Acetate
Somatropin
Sotalol Hydrochloride
Spironolactone
Streptokinase (except in
preparations for external use.)
Styramate
Sucralfate
Sulindac
Sulbactam
Sulconazole Nitrate
Sulphinpyrazone
Sulphonal; alkyl sulphonals
Sulpiride
Sulthiame
Sumatriptan
Suprararenal gland medulla, the
active principles of; their salts; except when contained in preparations
intended for external application only or in inhalants (other than inhalants in
aerosol dispensers containing adrenaline or its salts), rectal preparations or
preparations intended for use in the eye
Suxamethonium Chloride
Syrosingopine.
Tamoxifen Citrate
Tazobactam
Teicoplanin
Temocillin Sodium
Tenoxicam
Terazocin
Terbinafine Hydrochloride
Terbutaline
Tetrabenazine; its salts
Tetracosactrin
Thalidomide; its salts
Thiabendazole
Thiocarlide; its salts
Thioguanine
Thiotepa
Thymoxamine Hydrochloride
Thyroid gland, the active
principles of; their salts
L-Pyroglutamyl-L-histidyl-L-proline
amide (Thyrotrophin-releasing Hormone)
Tiaprofenic Acid
Tibolone
Ticarcillin Sodium
Timolol Maleate
Tinzaparin
Tioconazole (except in a preparation
for external use with a maximum concentration of 2% tioconazole and in the case
of vaginal use only for the treatment of vaginal candidiasis.)
Tocainide Hydrochloride
Tolazamide
Tolbutamide
Tolfenamic Acid
Tolmetin Sodium
Tolubuterol
Tranexamic Acid
Tranylcypromine Sulphate
Trazodone
Tretinoin
Triamterene
Tribavirin
Tribromethyl alcohol
2,2,2-Trichloroethyl alcohol,
esters of; their salts
Trientene Dihydrochloride
Trilostane
Trimeprazine Tartrate
Trimipramine; its salts
Tropisetron Hydrochloride
Tropicamide
Troxidone
Tubercurarine Chloride
Tybamate
Urofollitrophin
Urokinase
Vasopressins, natural and synthetic
Vecuronium Bromide
Verapamil;
its salts
Vidarabine
Vigabactrin
Viloxazine
Hydrochloride
Vinblastine
Sulphate
Vincristine
Sulphate
Xamoterol
Xipamide
Zidovudine
Zipiclone
Zopiclone
Zoxazolamine;
its salts
Zuclopenthixol
Acetate
Schedule 5
(Article 13(2))
PART A[25]
Form to which the substances specified are restricted when sold by
listed sellers of Part 2 poisons
Poison
|
Form to which sale is restricted
|
Aldicarb
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture
|
Alpha-chloralose
|
Preparations intended for in-door use in the destruction of rats
or mice and containing not more than 4%, weight in weight, of alphachloralose
|
Arsenical substances –
|
|
Arsenious oxide
|
Sheep dips, sheep washes.
|
Arsenic sulphides
|
Sheep dips, sheep washes.
|
Calcium arsenates.
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Calcium arsenites
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides or fungicides.
|
Copper acetoarsenite
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides or fungicides.
|
Copper arsenates
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides or fungicides.
|
Copper arsenites
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides or fungicides.
|
Lead arsenates
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides or fungicides.
|
Sodium arsenates
|
Sheep dips, sheep washes.
|
Sodium thioarsenates
|
Sheep dips, sheep washes.
|
Barium carbonate
|
Preparations for the destruction of rats or mice.
|
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their compounds with a metal or a base
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Dinosam; its compounds with a metal or a base
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Dinoseb; its compounds with a metal or a base
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Endosulfan
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Endothal; its salts
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Endrin
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Mercurial substances
–
|
|
Mercuric chloride
|
Agricultural and horticultural fungicides, seed and bulb
dressings, insecticides.
|
Mercuric iodide
|
Agricultural and horticultural fungicides, seed and bulb
dressings.
|
Organic
compounds of mercury
|
Agricultural and horticultural fungicides, seed and bulb
dressings, solutions containing not more than 5%, weight in volume, of phenyl
mercuric acetate for use in swimming baths.
|
Metallic oxalates other than potassium quadroxalate
|
Photographic solutions or materials.
|
Nitrobenzene
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides; substances for the
treatment of bee disease; ointments for the treatment of animals.
|
Organotin compounds, the following –
|
|
Compounds of fentin
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Paraquat, salts of
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture
|
Phosphorus compounds,
the following –
|
|
Amiton
|
Preparations for use in agriculture or horticulture.
|
Azinphos-methyl
|
|
Azinphos-methyl
|
|
Chlorfenvinphos
|
|
Demeton-O
|
|
Demeton-S
|
|
Dichlorvos
|
|
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl phosphorothionate
|
|
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate
|
|
Dimefox
|
|
Disulfoton
|
|
Ethion
|
|
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonothionate
|
|
Mazidox
|
|
Mecarbam
|
|
Methidathion
|
|
Mevinphos
|
|
Mipafox
|
|
Oxydemeton-methyl
|
|
Parathion
|
|
Phenkapton
|
|
Phorate
|
|
Phosphamidon
|
|
Schradan
|
|
Sulfotep
|
|
TEPP (HETP)
|
|
Thionazin
|
|
Triphosphoric pentadi-methylamide
|
|
Vamidothion
|
|
Zinc phosphide
|
Preparations for the destruction of rats or mice.
|
PART B[26]
Poisons which may be sold by listed sellers of Part 2 poisons
only to persons engaged in the trade or business of agriculture or horticulture
and for the purpose of that trade or business
Aldicarb
Arsenical poisons other than lead
arsenates, calcium arsenates and copper acetoarsenite.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their
compounds with a metal or a base; except winter washes containing not more than
the equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinosam; its compounds with a metal
or a base.
Dinoseb; its compounds with a metal
or a base.
Mercuric chlorides; mercuric
iodides; organic compounds of mercury; except solutions containing not more
than 5%, weight in volume, of phenyl mercuric acetate for use in swimming
baths.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds
of fentin
Paraquat, salts of
Phosphorus compounds, the following –
Amiton
Azinphos-ethyl
Azinphos-methyl
Chorfenvinphos
Demeton-O
Demeton-S
Dichlorvos.
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate.
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl
phosphate.
Dimefox
Disulfoton.
Ethion.
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate.
Mazidox.
Mecarbam.
Methidathion
Mevinphos.
Mipafox, except in the form of a
cap on a stick or wire.
Oxydemeton-methyl
Parathion.
Phenkapton.
Phorate.
Phosphamidon.
Schradan.
Sulfotep.
Thionazin.
Triphosphoric
pentadimethylamide.
Vamidothion.
Sodium 4-(dimethylamino)
benzenediazosulphonate
Schedule 6
(Articles 18
and 19)
Statement of particulars permitted in certain cases as to proportion
of poison
Name of Poison
|
|
Particulars
|
Alkaloids
|
|
The proportion of any one alkaloid of aconite that the
preparation would be calculated to contain on the assumption that all the
alkaloids of aconite in the preparation were that alkaloid.
|
Aconite, alkaloids of
|
|
Belladonna, alkaloids of
|
|
The same as above, with the substitution for the reference to
aconite of a reference to belladonna, calabar bean or such other of the said
poisons as the case may require.
|
Calabar bean, alkaloids of
|
Coca, alkaloids of
|
Colchicum, alkaloids of
|
Ephedra, alkaloids of
|
Ergot, alkaloids of
|
Gelsemium, alkaloids of
|
Jaborandi, alkaloids of
|
Lobelia, alkaloids of
|
Pomegranate, alkaloids of
|
Quebracho, alkaloids of, other than the alkaloids of red
quebracho
|
Sabadilla, alkaloids of
|
Solanaceous alkaloids not otherwise included in the Poisons List
|
Stavesacre, alkaloids of
|
Veratrum, alkaloids of
|
Yohimba, alkaloids of
|
Antimonial poisons
|
|
The proportion of antimony trioxide (Sb2O3) or antimony
pentoxide (Sb2O5) that the preparation would be calculated to contain on the
assumption that the antimony (Sb) in the poison had been wholly converted
into antimony trioxide or antimony pentoxide as the case may be.
|
Arsenical poisons
|
|
The proportion of arsenic trioxide (As2O3) or arsenic pentoxide
(As2O5) that the preparation would be calculated to contain on the assumption
that the arsenic (As) in the poison had been wholly converted into arsenic
trioxide or arsenic pentoxide as the case may be.
|
Barium, salts of
|
|
The proportion of one particular barium salt which the
preparation would be calculated to contain on the assumption that the barium
in the poison had been wholly converted into that salt.
|
Digitalis, glycosides of; other active principles of digitalis
|
|
The number of units of activity as defined in the British
Pharmacopoeia contained in a specified quantity of the preparation.
|
Hydrocyanic acid; cyanides, other than ferrocyanides and
ferricyanides
|
|
The proportion of hydrocyanic acid (HCN) that the preparation
would be calculated to contain on the assumption that the cyanides in the
poison had been wholly converted into hydrocyanic acid.
|
Insulin
|
|
The number of units of activity as defined in the British
Pharmacopoeia contained in a specified quantity of the preparation.
|
Lead, compounds of, with acids from fixed oils
|
|
The proportion of lead oxide (PbO) that the preparation would be
calculated to contain on the assumption that the lead in the poison had been
wholly converted into lead oxide.
|
Mercury, organic compounds of
|
|
The proportion of organically combined mercury (Hg) contained in
the preparation.
|
Nux Vomica
|
|
The proportion of strychnine contained in the preparation.
|
Opium
|
|
The proportion of morphine contained in the preparation.
|
Phenols
|
|
The proportion of phenols (added together) contained in the
preparation.
|
Compounds of a phenol with a metal
|
|
The proportion of phenols (added together) that the preparation
would be calculated to contain on the assumption that the compounds of
phenols with a metal had been wholly converted into the corresponding
phenols.
|
Pituitary gland, the active principles of
|
|
Either –
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
the number of units of activity as defined in the British
Pharmacopoeia contained in a specified quantity of the preparation;
|
|
|
|
(b)
|
the proportion of pituitary gland, or of anterior or of
posterior lobe of the gland as the case may be contained in the preparation;
or
|
|
|
|
(c)
|
the amount of pituitary gland or of anterior or of posterior
lobe of the gland, as the case may be, from which a specified quantity of the
preparation was obtained together with an indication whether the amount relates
to fresh or to dried gland substance.
|
Potassium hydroxide
|
|
The proportion of potassium monoxide (K2O) which the
preparation would be calculated on the assumption that the potassium
hydroxide in the preparation had been wholly converted into potassium monoxide.
|
Sodium hydroxide
|
|
The proportion of sodium monoxide (Na2O) which
preparation would be calculated to contain on the assumption that the sodium
hydroxide in the preparation had been wholly converted into sodium monoxide.
|
Strophanthus, glycosides of
|
|
The amount of Standard Tincture of Strophanthus as defined in
the British Pharmacopoeia 1948 which possesses the same activity as a
specified quantity of the preparation when assayed by the method described in
the said Pharmacopoeia.
|
Suprarenal gland medulla, the active principles of; their salts
|
|
Either –
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
the proportion of suprarenal gland or of the medulla of the
gland, as the case may be, contained in the preparation; or
|
|
|
|
(b)
|
the amount of suprarenal gland or of the medulla of the gland, as
the case may be, from which a specified quantity of the preparation was
obtained, together with an indication whether the amount relates to fresh or
to dried gland substance.
|
Thyroid gland, the active principles of; their salts
|
|
Either –
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
the proportion of thyroid gland contained in the preparation; or
|
|
|
|
(b)
|
the amount of thyroid gland from which a specified quantity of
the preparation was obtained, together with an indication whether the amount
relates to fresh or to dried gland.
|
Schedule 7[27]
(Article 20)
Indication of character of article prescribed for the purposes of Article 9(1)(c)(iii) of the Law
1. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. It is
dangerous to take this preparation except under medical supervision.” –
Medicines made up ready
for the internal treatment of human ailments and containing insulin.
2. To
be labelled with the words “Warning. Do not
exceed the stated dose” –
Medicines (other than
medicines containing insulin and medicines mentioned in paragraph 9 of this Schedule)
made up ready for the internal treatment of human ailments except in the case
of a substance included in Schedule 1.
3. To
be labelled with the words “Poison. For animal
treatment only.” and where the medicinal product contains
hexachlorophane and is for oral administration for the prevention or treatment
of liver fluke disease in cattle, shall contain a warning that the medicinal
product is not for use in lactating cattle or, where the medicinal product
contains hexachlorophane and is for oral administration for the prevention or
treatment of liver fluke disease in sheep or cattle, shall contain a statement
that protective clothing must be worn by the operator when the medicinal
product is being administered –
Medicines for the
treatment of animals.
4. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
preparation may cause serious inflammation of the skin in certain persons and
should be used only in accordance with expert advice.” –
Preparations for the
dyeing of hair containing phenylene diamines, tolylene diamines or other
alkylated-benzene diamines or their salts.
5. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
substance is caustic.” –
Potassium hydroxide,
sodium hydroxide, and articles containing either of those substances.
6. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
substance is poisonous. The inhalation of its vapour, mist, spray or dust may
have harmful consequences. It may also be dangerous to let it come into contact
with the skin or clothing.” –
Dinitrocresols (DNOC);
their compounds with a metal or a base; except preparations for the treatment
of human ailments and except winter washes containing not more than the
equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinosam, its compounds
with a metal or a base.
Dinoseb, its compounds
with a metal or a base.
Drazoxolon
Endothal; its salts.
Endrin.
Fenzalflor
Fluoroacetamide;
fluoroacetanilide.
Organic compounds of
mercury in aerosols.
Organo-tin compounds,
the following –
Compounds of fentin.
Phosphorus compounds,
the following –
Amiton.
Azinphos-ethyl.
Azinphos-methyl
Chlorfenvinphos.
Demeton-O.
Demeton-S.
Dichlorvos.
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate.
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl
phosphate.
Dimefox.
Disulfoton.
Ethion.
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphophonothionate.
Mazidox.
Mecarbam.
Methidathion
Mevinhphos.
Mipafox.
Oxydemeton-methyl.
Parathion.
Phenkapton.
Phorate.
Phosphamidon.
Schradan.
Sulfotep.
TEPP
(HETP)
Thionazin.
Triphosphoric
pentadimethylamide.
Vamidothion.
7. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
preparation should be administered only under medical supervision. The vapour
is dangerous.” –
Medicines made up ready
for the internal or external treatment of human ailments and containing dyflos.
8. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
substance is poisonous. Inhalation of the powder is dangerous. It is also
dangerous to let the substance come into contact with the skin or clothing.” –
Monofluoroacetic acid;
its salts.
9. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This may
cause drowsiness. If affected, do not drive or operate machinery.”
–
Medicines made up ready
for the internal treatment of human ailments if the poison is one of the
following –
Anti-histamine
substances, the following: their salts; their molecular compounds –
Antazoline.
Bromodiphenhydramine.
Buclizine.
Carbinoxamine.
Chlorcyclizine.
Chlorpheniramine.
Cinnarizine.
Clemizole.
Cyclizine.
Cyproheptadine.
3-Di-n-butylaminomethyl-4,5,6-trihydroxyphthalide.
Diphenhydramine.
Diphenylpyraline.
Doxylamine.
Isothipendyl.
Mebhydrolin.
Meclozine.
Phenindamine.
Pheniramine.
Phenyltoloxamine.
Promethazine.
Pyrrobutamine.
Thenalidine.
Tolpropamine.
Triprolidine.
Substances being tetra-N–substituted
derivatives of ethylenediamine or propylenediamine.
10. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. Ingestion
can be harmful. If this preparation is used on the hands, they should be
thoroughly washed before handling food” –
Preparations for
topical application containing methanthelinium bromide or propantheline
bromide.
11. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. Do not inhale
vapour or allow contact with skin, eyes or clothing”. –
Bromomethane
Chloropicrin.
12. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. This
preparation is poisonous and gives off a poisonous vapour on exposure to air.
Do not swallow, inhale the vapour or allow contact with the skin” –
Preparations containing
aluminium phosphide.
13. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. Not be to
be used for whole body bathing except on medical advice” and
“Not to be used for babies” –
Medicinal soaps
containing more than 0.1% of hexachlorophane.
14. To
be labelled with the words “Caution. Not to be
used for babies” or a warning that the medicinal product is not to
be administered except on medical advice, to a child under 2 years of
age –
Medicinal products
containing hexachlorophane for use by being administered to human beings.
Schedule 8[28]
(Article 26)
Poisons required to be specially labelled for transport
Aldicarb
Aluminium Phosphide
Arsenical poisons.
Barium, salts of.
Bromomethane
Chloropicrin
Dinitrocresols (DNOC), their
compounds with a metal or a base, when contained in preparations for use in
agriculture or horticulture, except winter washes containing not more than the
equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinosam, its compounds with a metal
or a base, when contained in preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
Dinoseb, its compounds with a metal
or a base, when contained in preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
Drazoxolon
Endosulfan.
Endothal; its salts.
Endrin.
Fenazaflor
Fluoroacetamide; fluoroacetanilide.
Foremetanate
Hydrocyanic acid; cyanides, other
than ferrocyanides and ferricyanides except preparations containing less than
the equivalent of 0.1%, weight in weight, of hydrocyanic acid (HCN)
Methomyl
Monofluoroacetic acid; its salts.
Nicotine, except in solid
preparations containing less than 4% of nicotine.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds of fentin.
Phosphorus compounds, the
following –
Amiton.
Azinphos-ethyl.
Azinphos-methyl.
Chlorfenvinphos.
Demephion
Demeton-methyl
Demeton-O
Demeton-S.
Demeton-O-methyl.
Demeton-S-methyl.
Demeton-S-methyl sulphone
Dochlorvos.
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate.
Diethyl
p-nitrophenyl phosphate.
Dimefox.
Dioxathion
Disulfoton.
Ethion.
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate.
Fonofos
Mazidox.
Mecarbam.
Methidathion
Mevinphos.
Mipafox.
Omethoate
Oxydemeton-methyl.
Parathion.
Phenkapton.
Phorate.
Phosphamidon.
Schradan.
Sulfotep.
TEPP
(HETP)
Thionazin.
Thiometon
Triphosphoric
pentadimethylamide.
Vamidothion.
Sodium 4-(dimethylamino)
benzenediazosulphonate
Strychnine.
Thallium, salts of.
Schedule 9
(Article 32)
Form of register of premises
Address of premises.
|
Full name of authorized seller
of poisons carrying on business on premises.
|
If authorized seller of
poisons is a representative within the meaning of Art. 71 of the Medicines (Jersey) Law 1995, full name of person whom the seller represents.
|
Name of registered pharmacist
having personal control of the business.
|
|
|
|
|
Schedule 10[29]
(Article 33)
Form of application for entry in the list kept in pursuance of Article 71(4) of the Medicines (Jersey) Law 1995
PHARMACY and POISONS
(JERSEY) LAW 1952.
|
Form
of application by a person to have the person’s name entered in the
list of persons entitled to sell poisons included in Part II of the Poison
List.
|
To the Minister for Health and
Social Services
|
I,
.........................................................................................
being engaged in the business of .........................................
apply to have my name entered in the list kept in pursuance of Article 71(4)
of the Medicines
(Jersey) Law 1995 in respect of the following premises, namely.
|
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
as a person entitled to sell from those premises poisons included in Part 2
of the Poisons List.
|
I hereby nominate .......................................................................
................................................................................................
to act as my deputy (deputies) for the sale of poisons in accordance with Article 13(1)
of the Poisons (General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968.
|
Signature of applicant
..................................
|
Date .........................
|
For official use
|
|
..............................................................................................................................................................................................
|
NOTE
The entry of a person’s
name in the Minister’s list does not entitle that person to retail
poisons in Part 1 of the Poisons List which, by the provisions of the Pharmacy
and Poisons
(Jersey) Law 1952, may only be retailed by authorized sellers of
poisons (i.e registered pharmacists).
A person whose name is
entered in the Minister’s list (a listed seller of Part 2 poisons)
is permitted, subject to
certain conditions (see below), to sell the
poisons in Part 2 of the Poisons List, namely –
Ammonia.
Arsenical substances, the
following –
Aldicarb
Alpha-chloralose
Arsenic sulphides.
Arsenious
oxide.
Calcium
arsenates.
Calcium
arsenites.
Copper
acetoarsenite.
Copper
arsenates.
Copper arsenites.
Lead arsenates.
Potassium arsenites.
Sodium arsenates.
Sodium arsenites.
Sodium thioarsenates.
Barium, salts of, the
following –
Barium carbonate.
Barium silicofluoride.
Diamines, the following; their
salts –
phenylene
diamines; tolylene diamines; other alkylated-benzene diamines.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their
compounds with a metal or a base.
Dinosam; its compounds with a
metal or a base.
Dinoseb; its compounds with a
metal or a base.
Drazoxolon, its salts
Endosulfan.
Endothal; its salts.
Endrin.
Fenazaflor
Foremetanate
Formaldehyde.
Formic acid.
Hydrochloric acid.
Hydrofluoric acid; potassium
fluoride; sodium flouride; sodium silicofluoride.
Mercuric chloride; mercuric
iodide; organic compounds of mercury except compounds which contain a methyl (CH3)
group directly linked to the mercury atom.
Metallic oxalates.
Methomyl
Niclofolan
Nicotine; its salts.
Nitric acid.
Nitrobenzene.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds of fentin.
Paraquat; salts of
Phenols as defined in Part 1
of the Poisons List (Jersey) Order 1968 in substances containing less than
60%, weight in weight, of phenols; compounds of phenol with a metal in
substances containing less than the equivalent of 60%, weight in weight, of
phenols.
Phosphoric acid.
Phosphorus compounds, the
following –
Amiton,
azinphos-ethyl, azinphos-methyl, chlorfenvinphos, demeton-O, demeton-S,
demeton-O-methyl, demeton-S-methyl, dichlorvos, diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate, diethyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate, dimefox, disulfoton, ethion, ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate, mazidox, mecarbam, mevinphos, mipafox,
oxydemeton-methyl, parathion, phenkapton, phorate, phosphamidon, schradan,
sulfotep, TEPP (HETP), thionazin, triphosphoric pentadimethylamide,
vamidothion.
Potassium hydroxide.
Sodium
4-(dimethylamino)benzenediazosulphanate
Sodium hydroxide.
Sodium nitrite.
Sulphuric acid.
Zinc phosphide.
The requirements which
apply to the sale of poisons by a listed seller of Part 2 poisons are laid
down in Article 9 of the Pharmacy and Poisons (Jersey)
Law 1952 and in the Poisons (General Provisions) (Jersey)
Order 1968.
The following is a
summary of the requirements –
A. – Requirements applying to
all listed sellers of Part 2 poisons.
1. The
sale must be effected on the premises specified in the Minister’s list.
2. The
container of the poison must be labelled with the various particulars and in
the manner required by Article 9(1)(c) of the Law and Articles 17 to
22 of the Order.
3. No
poison may be sold except in containers which comply with the requirements of Article 22
of the Order.
4. In
the case of any arsenical or mercurial substance (unless it contains no more
than the small proportions of arsenic or mercury specified in Schedule 1
to the Order), and in the case of barium silicofluoride, endrin,
fluoroacetamide, fluoroacetanilide and nicotine (excepting agricultural and
horticultural insecticides consisting of nicotine dust containing not more than
4% of nicotine) and in the case of dinitrocresols (except winter washes
containing not more than 5% thereof), dinosam, dinoseb and the organophosphorous
compounds, the purchaser must either (a) be
known to the seller, or to the person in charge of the premises on which the
substance is sold or of the department of the business in which the sale is
effected to be a person to whom the poison may properly be sold, or (b) produce a valid certificate in the form prescribed
in Schedule 12 to the Order. In addition, in the case of such poisons, the
required particulars of the sale must be entered, before delivery, in the
Poisons Book to be kept in the form prescribed in Schedule 13 to the Order
and (subject to the exception next mentioned) the entry must be signed by the
purchaser (Article 6). In the case of a sale to a person for the purpose
of the person’s trade or business (farmer, horticulturist, etc.), Article 7(3)
permits the signature of the entry in the Poisons Book to be dispensed with
upon certain conditions, one of which is that an order signed by the purchaser
has previously been obtained.
5. Arsenical
and mercurial substances, barium carbonate, dinitrocresols, dinosam, dinoseb,
endrin, fluoroacetamide, fluoroacetanilide, metallic oxalates other than
potassium quadroxalate, nitrobenzene, the phosphorous compounds and zinc
phosphide may be sold only in particular types of preparation as specified in Schedule 5
to the Order (e.g. sodium arsenates in sheep
dips, calcium arsenates in insecticides), and in containers labelled clearly
with a notice of the special purpose for which they are to be used and with a
warning that they are to be used for that purpose only (Article 13(2)(a) ).
6. The
following poisons may be sold only to persons
engaged in the trade or business of agriculture or horticulture and for the
purpose of that trade or business –
Arsenical poisons other than
lead arsenates, calcium arsenates and copper acetoarsenite.
Dinitrocresols (DNOC); their
compounds with a metal or a base; except winter washes containing not more than
the equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinosam; its compounds with a
metal or a base.
Dinoseb; its compounds with a
metal or a base.
Mercuric chlorides; mercuric
iodides; organic compounds of mercury; except solutions containing not more
than 5%, weight in volume, of phenyl mercuric acetate for use in swimming baths.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds of fentin.
Phosphorus compounds, the
following –
Amiton.
Azinphos-ethyl.
Azinphos-methyl.
Chlorfenvinphos.
Demeton-O.
Demeton-S.
Dichlorvos
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl
phosphorothionate.
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl
phosphate.
Dimefox
Disulfoton
Ethion
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate.
Mazidox
Mecarbam.
Mevinphos
Mipafox, except in the form of a cap
on a stick or wire.
Oxydemeton-methyl
Parathion
Phenkapton
Phorate
Phosphamidon
Schradan
Sulfotep
Thionazin
Triphosphoric pentadimethylamide
Vamidothion. (Article 13(2)(b)).
7. It
is unlawful to store any poison except in a container impervious to the poison
and sufficiently stout to prevent leakage from the container arising from the
ordinary risks of handling (Article 24(1)).
8. Any
poison consigned for transport must be sufficiently stoutly packed to avoid
leakage arising from the ordinary risks of handling and transport. In the case
of the following poisons, the outside of any package consigned for transport by
a carrier must be labelled conspicuously with the name of the poison and a
notice that it is to be kept from food and from empty food
containers –
Arsenical poisons.
Barium, salts of
Dinitrocresols (DNOC), their
compounds with a metal or a base, when contained in preparations for use in
agriculture or horticulture, except winter washes containing not more than the
equivalent of 5% of dinitrocresols.
Dinosam, its compounds with a
metal or a base when contained in preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
Dinoseb; its compounds with a
metal or a base, when contained in preparations for use in agriculture or
horticulture.
Endosulfan.
Endothal; its salts.
Endrin.
Fluoroacetamide;
fluoroacetanilide.
Hydrocyanic acid; cyanides,
other than ferrocyanides and ferricyanides except preparations containing less
than the equivalent of 0.1%, weight in weight, of hydrocyanic acid (HCN)
Monofluoroacetic acid; its
salts.
Nicotine, except in solid
preparations containing less than 4% of nicotine.
Organo-tin compounds, the
following –
Compounds of fentin.
Phosphorus compounds, the
following –
Amiton
Azinphos-ethyl
Azinphos-methyl
Chlorfenvinphos
Demeton-O
Demeton-S
Demeton-O-methyl
Demeton-S-methyl
Dichlorvos
Diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl phosphorothionate
Diethyl p-nitrophenyl
phosphate
Dimefox
Disulfoton
Ethion
Ethyl p-nitrophenyl
phenylphosphonothionate
Mazidox
Mecarbam
Mevinphos
Mipafox
Oxydemeton-methyl
Parathion
Phenkapton
Phorate
Phosphamidon
Schradan
Sulfotep
TEPP (HETP)
Thionazin
Triphosphoric pentadimethylamide
Vamidothion.
Strychnine
Thallium, salts of
These poisons may not be
knowingly carried in any vehicle in which food is being transported unless the
food is in a part effectively separated from that containing the poison or is
otherwise adequately protected from the risk of contamination (Article 26).
B – Additional requirements applying solely to listed
shopkeepers
1. No
poison, other than ammonia, hydrochloric acid (spirits of salt), nitric acid,
potassium quadroxalate and sulphuric acid, may be sold by a listed shopkeeper
except in closed containers as closed by the manufacturer or other person from
whom the poison was obtained (Article 13(1)(a) ).
2. Arsenical
substances – arsenious oxide, arsenic sulphides, calcium arsenates,
calcium arsenites, copper acetoarsenite, copper arsenates, copper arsenites,
lead arsenates, potassium arsenites, sodium arsenates, sodium arsenites and
sodium thioarsenates, barium carbonate, dinitrocresols (DNOC) – their
compounds with a metal or a base, dinosam – its compounds with a metal or
a base, dinoseb – its compounds with a metal or a base, endrin,
fluoroacetamide, fluoroacetanilide, mercurial substances – mercuric
chloride, mercuric iodide and organic compounds of mercury, metallic oxalates
other than potassium quadroxalate, nitrobenzene, phosphorous compounds –
amiton, demeton-O, demeton-S, diethyl 4-methyl-7-coumarinyl phosphorothionate,
diethyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate, dimefox,
ethyl p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonothionate,
mazidox, 2-methoxycarbonyl-1-methyl-vinyl dimethyl phosphate, mipafox,
parathion, schradan, sulfotep, TEPP (HETP) and triphosphoric pentadimethylamide
and zinc phosphide may not be sold except by the listed shopkeeper or by a
responsible deputy nominated by the shopkeeper to the local authority in
accordance with Article 13(1)(b); and they must be stored either in a
cupboard or drawer reserved solely for poisons or in a part of the premises
which is partitioned off or otherwise separated from the rest of the premises
and to which customers are not allowed to have access, or upon a shelf reserved
solely for poisons, provided in the last case that no food is kept under the
shelf and the container of the poison is distinguishable by touch from that of
nonpoisonous substances stored nearby; but if contained in substances for use
in agriculture or horticulture, these poisons must be stored, either in a
cupboard or drawer reserved solely for poisons intended for such use or in such
a separate part of the premises as aforesaid where no food is kept (Article 24(2)).
Schedule 11
(Article 33)
Form of the list to be kept in pursuance of Article 71(4) of the
Medicines (Jersey) Law 1995
List of persons entitled
to sell poisons in Part 2 of the Poisons List
Full name.
|
Address of premises.
|
Description of business
carried on at the premises.
|
Name of deputy (or deputies)
permitted to sell.
|
|
|
|
|
Schedule 12
(Article 34)
Certificate for the purchase of a poison
For the purposes of Article 9(2)(a)(i) of the Pharmacy and Poisons
(Jersey) Law 1952, I, the undersigned, a householder occupying (a)
................................. certify from my knowledge of (b)
.................................. of (a)
.......................................... that he/she is a person to whom (c)
................................. may properly be supplied.
|
I further certify that (d)
............................................ is the signature of the said (b)...................................................
|
......................................................
|
Signature of householder giving
|
certificate.
|
Date
.......................................
|
(a)
|
Insert full postal address.
|
(b)
|
Insert full name of intending
purchaser.
|
(c)
|
Insert name of poison.
|
(d)
|
Intending purchaser to sign his
or her name here.
|
Endorsement
required by Article 34 of the Poisons
(General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968, to
be made by a Connétable or Centenier
when, but only when, the householder giving the certificate is not known to
the seller of the poison to be a responsible person of good character .
|
I certify that in so far as is
known to me .................... .................(a) is a responsible person
of good character.
|
Signature
.......................................
|
Description
....................................
|
Date
...............................................
|
(a)
|
Insert full name of householder
giving the certificate.
|
Schedule 13
(Article 35)
Form of entry to be made in the book to be kept by sellers of
poisons in accordance with Article 9(2)(b) of the Law
|
Date
of sale
|
Purchaser’s
|
|
Name
and quantity of poison supplied
|
|
Name
|
|
Address
|
|
Business,
trade or occupation
|
|
Purpose
for which stated to
be required
|
|
Date
of certificate (if any)
|
|
Name
and address of person giving certificate (if any)
|
|
Signature
of purchaser or where a signed order is permitted by the Poisons (General
Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968, the date of the signed order.
|
Schedule 14
(Article 16)
Form of authority for purchasing strychnine for killing moles
Authority for the purchase of
strychnine for killing moles in pursuance of Article 16(1)(e) of the Poisons
(General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1964.
|
I, being a person duly
authorized by the Minister for Health and Social Services, authorize
(a) .................................................... to
purchase within 3 months from the date hereof (b) ................. of strychnine for the purpose of killing
moles.
|
Signature
...................................
|
Description
................................
|
Date
...........................................
|
(a)
|
Insert full name of intending
purchaser.
|
(b)
|
Insert amount authorized to be
purchased which must not exceed one ounce.
|
Schedule 15
(Article 6)
Substances in which poison is exempted by Article 6 from Article 9(2)
of the Law
Poison.
|
Substances in which exempted.
|
Nicotine
|
Agricultural and horticultural insecticides consisting of
nicotine dusts containing not more than 4%, weight in weight, of nicotine.
|
Schedule 16
(Article 14)
Poisons required to be coloured in certain cases
Arsenical poisons.
Fluoroacetamide; fluoroacetanilide.
Monofluoroacetic acid; its salts.
Organo-tin compounds, the following –
Compounds of fentin.
Phosphorus compounds, the following –
Azinphos-ethyl
Azinphos-methyl
Chlorfenvinphos
Dichlorvos
Disulfoton in solution
Ethion
Mecarbam
Mevinphos
Oxydemeton-methyl
Phenkapton
Phorate in solution
Phosphamidon
Thionazin
Vamidothion.
Schedule 17
(Article 16)
Form of certificate authorizing the purchase of monofluoroacetic
acid, a salt thereof, fluoroacetamide or fluoroacetanilide as a rodenticide
Certificate authorizing the
purchase of monofluoroacetic acid, a salt thereof, fluoroacetamide or
fluoroacetanilide as a rodenticide.
|
I certify that (a).................................................................
of
(b)..................................................
is required for use by employees of (c)
...........................................
as a rodenticide in (d) ............................
...............................situated
at (e).......................................................
|
......................................................
|
Signature of issuing officer
|
Date
.................................
|
|
(a)
|
Insert quantity required.
|
|
(b)
|
Insert “monofluoroacetic
acid” or the salt thereof, or “fluoroacetamide” or
“fluoroacetanilide” as the case may require.
|
|
(c)
|
Insert the name of the authority
in question.
|
|
(d)
|
State “ships” or
“sewers” as the case may require.
|
|
(e)
|
State the situation of the ships
or sewers as the case may require.
|
Schedule 18[30]
(Article 16)
Form of authority for purchasing aluminium phosphide for killing
moles
Authority for the purchase of
aluminium phosphide for killing moles in pursuance of Article 16(9)(d) of
the Poisons (General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1968.
I being a person duly authorized
by the Minister for Health and Social Services authorize (a)…................................................................
to purchase during the period of 24 months from the date hereof aluminium
phosphide for the purpose of killing moles.
Signature…........................................
Description….....................................
Date…................................................
(a) insert full name of
intending purchaser