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nhshistory.net nhshistory.com Email author |
National Health Service History |
. From
Cradle to Grave - the first 60 years of the NHS
| PLEASE NOTE MIRROR SERVERS IN CASE OF SERVER FAILURE. THIS SITE CAN BE ACCESSED AT www.nhshistory.com. net. org.uk, co.uk and info
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This material is the most substantial, perhaps the only, account of the first 60 years of the NHS. I deal with what has happened, rather than what people and politicians plan, hope or think will happen. I do not cover the reasons for the creation of the NHS, but what happened from 1948 and why - my first book on the London Hospital System covers the creation better. Because devolution has created major differences between the health services in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the latter three countries are not specifically considered, not least because I have less knowledge of their different systems. It is frequently updated and is used as a teaching resource by degree programmes in health sciences It is likely to be archived by the British Library. The web version covers the 60 years of the NHS, the published version the first 50 years. Now 10 years old, the book is harder to obtain, but try booksellers ISBN 1 85717 148 9 or your library. You are encouraged to buy it or borrow it from your library - but virtually the whole text is on line. If you want your own, permanent, copy of the current site as a CD Rom I should be able to provide one for £12. This would avoid the possibility of losing access to it in the future. email me if you are interested. The CD Rom includes my first book on the London Hospital System, now out of print. | ||
| Recent additions include | Site contents | Geoffrey Rivett's first book |
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| References: From Cradle to Grave (the book and the chapters up to 1998) is well referenced in the conventional way. The development of Internet has altered and continues to change referencing. Sometimes I use hyperlinks to documents on my server, or to journals and official publications. "Access controls" may operate. The advent of continuous publishing, as in the case of the BMJ, is significant because the key source is now the web, not a paper edition. For official documents My Click use licence from OPSI is number C2008001265 Sources used include the BMJ, Health Service Journal, Health Affairs, the Department of Health and The Times. I acknowledge my debt to these sources, to those writing on health care and the NHS, and to those who have spoken to me about NHS and clinical developments. |
| You may also be interested in A Chronology of State Medicine, Public Health, Welfare and Related services in Britain, 1066-1999: and Education in England by Derek Gillard, providing online access to major documents in the development of the educational system
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