ChatterBank1 min ago
nhs
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When I was very young, back in 1939 I had Rheumatic Fever which in those days was very serious and which left me with heart problems for the next five years which I spent in hospitals and heart homes. The question is that my parents were`nt very well off and my father left my mother for another woman, so as there wasn`t any NHS in those days, WHO PAID FOR MY TREATMENT ALL THAT TIME?????
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In the 1930s, the UK had a conventional mix. For example, 90% of the workforce had social insurance, covering the GP service and sick pay. The other 10% and all dependants either had private insurance or made full out-of-pocket payments. Hospital costs were paid by a similar mix. 10 million people had private insurance (e.g. workers' contributory schemes) and the rest paid means-tested charges. Local and national taxes funded public health and both hospitals and specialist clinics run by local authorities.
http://www.historyandpolicy.org/papers/policy- paper-08.html
http://www.historyandpolicy.org/papers/policy- paper-08.html
Interesting ethel , i was going by the link i found below for my answer.
http://www.stgeorges.nhs.uk/givingwhy.asp
http://www.stgeorges.nhs.uk/givingwhy.asp
Sometimes family doctors actually subsidised their patients' treatment on the quiet. In addition there was a massive involvement of charitable giving by the rich, which is often forgotten about now. eg the heiress of the local brewery where I live gave the equivalent of millions of pounds in today's money, to buy X-ray equipment and support new wards in the Infirmary. Like many of her generation, she had a 'leftish' political outlook and it was this outlook among the upper classes that led to the welfare state reforms after the war.