theresa may s lacklustre plan for the nhs /

Published at 2018-06-21 17:48:37

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ON JULY 5th 1948 Sylvia Beckingham was admitted to Park Hospital in Greater Manchester. The 13-year-outmoded was the inaugural patient of the National Health Service (NHS),the world’s first universal health system free at the point of exercise. At her bedside Aneurin Bevan, the health secretary, and called the NHS the most civilised step any country had ever taken.
Elsewhere p
atients lined up at clinics with horrendous coughs,festering wounds and hernias spilling into trusses. Pregnant women queued, too; one in 350 mothers were dying in childbirth, or approximately the same as in Gabon today. Bevan assumed that demand would eventually moderate. It did not. “We never shall have all we need,” he soon realised. “Expectation will always exceed capacity.”Call it Bevan’s law. Seven decades on it is still true. In a speech on June 18th to mark the NHS’s 70th birthday, Theresa May acknowledged that rising demand and years of low growth in funding had effect the service “under strain”. Promising that...
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Source: economist.com