National Health Service |
COVID continue affecting thousands of people around the world. Countries have reforced their national health services to fight against this pandemic. One of the oldest health services is the NHS, the publicly-funded healthcare systems of the United Kingdom.
The Grandma wants to talk about it and about the importance of these national health services around the world. Health is not a business, health is a right and we must preserve and invest in national health services because they are the first medical line who protect everybody, everywhere.
The Grandma wants to pay tribute to all medical services around the world talking about one of them, one of the oldest, the National Health Service of the United Kingdom that was created on a day like today in 1948.
The National Health Service (NHS) is the umbrella term for the publicly-funded healthcare systems of the United Kingdom (UK). Since 1948 it has been funded out of general taxation.
It is made up of the four separate systems of the four countries of the UK: The National Health Service in England, NHS Scotland, NHS Wales, and Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland. They were established together in 1948 as one of the major social reforms following the Second World War.
More information: NHS
The founding principles were that services should be comprehensive, universal and free at the point of delivery. Each service provides a comprehensive range of health services, free at the point of use for people ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom, apart from dental treatment and optical care.
In England, NHS patients have to pay prescription charges with a range of exemptions from these charges.
Each of the UK's health service systems operates independently, and is politically accountable to the relevant government: the Scottish Government, Welsh Government, Northern Ireland Executive, and the UK Government, responsible for England's NHS.
Taken together, the four National Health Services in 2015–2016 employed around 1.6 million people with a combined budget of £136.7 billion.
Thank you to National Health Service |
In 2014 the total health
sector workforce across the UK was 2,165,043. This broke down into
1,789,586 in England, 198,368 in Scotland, 110,292 in Wales and 66,797
in Northern Ireland.
In 2017, there were 691,000 nurses registered in the UK, down 1,783 from the previous year. However, this is the first time nursing numbers have fallen since 2008.
Every 24 hours it sees one million patients, and with 1.7 million staff it is the fifth biggest employer in the world.
When purchasing drugs, the NHS has significant market power that, based on its own assessment of the fair value of the drugs, influences the global price, typically keeping prices lower. Several other countries either copy the UK's model or directly rely on Britain’s assessments for their own decisions on state-financed drug reimbursements.
Dr Somerville Hastings, President of the Socialist Medical Association, successfully proposed a resolution at the 1934 Labour Party Conference that the party should be committed to the establishment of a State Health Service.
More information: NHS Scotland
Calls
for a unified medical service can be dated back to the Minority
Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Law in 1909, but it was
following the 1942 Beveridge Report's recommendation to create comprehensive health and rehabilitation services for prevention and
cure of disease that cross-party consensus emerged on introducing a
National Health Service of some description.
Conservative MP and
Health Minister, Henry Willink later advanced this notion of a National
Health Service in 1944 with his consultative White Paper A National
Health Service which was circulated in full and short versions to
colleagues, as well as in newsreel.
When Clement Attlee's Labour Party won the 1945 election he appointed Aneurin Bevan as Health Minister. Bevan then embarked upon what the official historian of the NHS, Charles Webster, called an audacious campaign to take charge of the form the NHS finally took.
Bevan's National Health
Service was proposed in Westminster legislation for England and Wales
from 1946 and Scotland from 1947, and the Northern Ireland Parliament's
Public Health Services Act 1947.
Thank you to NHS staff |
The NHS was born out of the ideal that good healthcare should be available to all, regardless of wealth.
Although being freely accessible regardless of wealth maintained Henry Willink's principle of free healthcare for all, Conservative MPs were in favour of maintaining local administration of the NHS through existing arrangements with local authorities fearing that an NHS which owned hospitals on a national scale would lose the personal relationship between doctor and patient.
Conservative MPs voted in favour of their amendment to Bevan's Bill to maintain local control and ownership of hospitals and against Bevan's plan for national ownership of all hospitals. The Labour government defeated Conservative amendments and went ahead with the NHS as it remains today; a single large national organisation, with devolved equivalents, which forced the transfer of ownership of hospitals from local authorities and charities to the new NHS.
Bevan's principle of
ownership with no private sector involvement has since been diluted,
with later Labour governments implementing large scale financing
arrangements with private builders in private finance initiatives and
joint ventures.
More information: NHS Wales
At its launch by Bevan on 5 July 1948 it had at its heart three core principles: That it meet the needs of everyone, that it be free at the point of delivery, and that it be based on clinical need, not ability to pay.
Three years after the founding of the NHS, Bevan resigned from the Labour government in opposition to the introduction of charges for the provision of dentures and glasses. The following year, Winston Churchill's Conservative government introduced prescription charges. These charges were the first of many controversies over reforms to the NHS throughout its history.
In 2020, the NHS issued medical advice in combating COVID-19 and partnered with tech companies to create computer dashboards to help combat the nation's coronavirus pandemic.
During the pandemic, the NHS also established integrated COVID into its 1-1-1 service line as well. Following his discharge from the St. Thomas' Hospital in London on 13 April 2020 after being diagnosed with COVID-19, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson described NHS medical care as astonishing and that NHS saved my life. No question.
In this time, the NHS underwent major re-organisation to prepare for the COVID-19 pandemic.
More information: NHS Northern Ireland
Attention to health is life's greatest hindrance.
Plato
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