Happy 70th birthday, NHS: what the newspapers said in 1948

The media welcomed the arrival of the National Health Service - albeit with some reservations about a 'state takeover'

Woodberry Down Health Centre, Stoke Newington, in 1952
Mothers with their babies at the new Woodberry Down Health Centre, Stoke Newington, in 1952
(Image credit: L Blandford/Getty Images)

The NHS turns 70 today, marking seven decades of “free at the point of use” healthcare in the UK.

The National Health Service Act, passed by parliament in a post-war flurry of social reform in 1946, finally came into effect on 5 July 1948.

Before the passage of the act, many working people could access medical treatment only through workplace health insurance schemes, introduced by the 1911 National Insurance Act.

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Those not covered by such a scheme, including workers’ families and those unable to work due to age or disability, either had to pay for private treatment - not an option for many low-earning families - throw themselves on the mercy of benevolent associations or simply go without.

In 1948, that all changed. Never again would sick Brits have to make an agonising choice between getting medical attention or being able to make ends meet.

The first official NHS patient was 13-year-old Sylvia Diggory, who was treated for acute nephritis at the Park Hospital in Manchester, where then-health minister Aneurin Bevan officially launched the service at her bedside.

The introduction of the NHS represented an enormous social change in Britain, and one which would go on to form part of our national identity. So how did the media react at the time?

By and large, the national press welcomed the nationalisation of the healthcare system - although modern readers might be surprised by the relative lack of fanfare accorded to this landmark of British social history.

"The NHS began, not with a bang, but more with a very British polite round of applause," the Health Service Journal said in a 2008 edition marking its 60th anniversary.

The Daily Express was a model of restrained enthusiasm: "The new National Health Scheme is launched," it announced in a brisk 5 July editorial: "Wish it success."

Press coverage of the new service had been positive for the most part, but "perhaps too complacent", the Manchester Guardian wrote on 5 July 1948.

Passing the bill into law was a great symbolic victory, but the real challenge would be building up the nation's healthcare infrastructure to accommodate millions of new patients.

"One must think of the health service as a huge natural organism in process of growth," the Guardian warned, and "not as a creature of magic, called out of the void by the wand of the Minister of Health".

Nonetheless, the establishment of the NHS and the expansion of the National Insurance Scheme, which both went into effect on the same day, represented a seismic social shift.

Fundamentally, both reforms were "designed to offset as far as they can the inequalities that arise from the chances of life", the Guardian said. "It is important to realise the fundamental change in attitude which this implies, and its consequences for our social evolution."

Nonetheless, a few newspapers expressed uncertainty about the unprecedented intrusion of the state into the lives of its citizens, as well as the high cost of the new scheme.

A London Evening Standard headline announcing the impending arrival of the NHS included the fact that it would cost £152m a year.

The newspaper's cartoonist, David Low, also satirised clashes between the government and medical professionals over their new state-funded salaries, portraying Health Minister Aneurin Bevan warning "open wide" as he drilled into a dentist's pockets.

"On Monday morning, you will wake up in a new Britain – in a State which 'takes over' all citizens six months before they are born," said a Daily Mail editorial on 3 July, offering a more ambivalent take on the cradle-to-grave welfare state.

The government would oversee each citizen's "birth... schooling, sickness, workless days, widowhood, and retirement" the Mail said, closing with a slightly sinister euphemism: "Finally it helps defray the cost of their departure."

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