For the last couple of days I’ve been watching the latest series of Foyle’s War. While previous series concerned crime on the British homefront during World War II, this newest series concerns itself with Foyle’s activities after the war. The war with which Foyle’s activities are juxtaposed is the Cold War.
One of the great developments in British life in the aftermath of World War II was the establishment of British National Health, that’s touched upon a bit in the series, and, in the context of our own feeble healthcare reform, that’s made me think about the factors that underpinned the creation of British National Health and why we haven’t followed the lead of the rest of the developed world.
This is a pretty fair paper on the subject. I think that I would characterize the reasons that underpinned the adoption of British National Health as
- World War II
- Technological
- Sociological
- Economic
- Political
It’s obvious that World War II was an enormous impetus towards the adoption of a national health service in Britain. The massive bombings created both a feeling of national solidarity and the need. British killed or wounded during the war were numerically higher than ours and three times as high as a percentage of their population. I wasn’t there but I suspect that nearly every Briton knew someone who’d been killed or injured in the war and many of the injured needed ongoing care. The historian Charles Webster noted “The Luftwaffe achieved in months what had defeated politicians and planners for at least two decades.”
Additionally, the war upset entrenched bureaucracies and power structures that had worked against a universal healthcare system.
I think that technological developments, some spurred by the war, also played a major role. The first sulfa antibiotic was developed in 1935, penicillin was productized in 1942, and streptomycin developed in 1943. These antibiotics had two implications. The first was that for almost the first time medicine was actually able to do something to make people healthier. The second was that it raised the expectation of future developments. People were eager to share in the benefits of these developments.
Britain was a very different country in 1948, when the BNH was established, and today. About 3% of its population were immigrants and most of those were Irish who had a sort of grudging status as honorary Britons due to the many-century relationship between the Irish and the Brits. Would Britain have adopted a system of universal care if its immigrant population had been many multiples of what it was (as it is now) and most of the new immigrants were non-Europeans? Frankly, I doubt it.
One of the considerations not frequently mentioned is that during the period just before the war and certainly by the war and its aftermath, a generation of young doctors had arisen in the United Kingdom that were not only convinced that they could practice medicine more effectively under a system of universal care but that they would benefit economically from such a system. In the United States by contrast the most ardent and organized opponents of universal care, at least in the 1960s and 1990s, were physicians. The tide on that may be turning very, very slowly.
In 1945 Labour won a historic electoral victory, gaining nearly 300 seats in Commons. One of the planks of the manifesto they ran on was universal care. By comparison no major political party in the United States has ever run on such a platform.
There’s a final factor which might be deemed “historical”. Germany adopted a system of universal care nearly 150 years ago. France and the United Kingdom adopted their plans in the aftermath of World War II as did most other European countries. Japan adopted its system in the 1960s. The tide of history is moving in somewhat the opposite direction now with most developed economies retrenching, including Sweden whose healthcare system is nearly 400 years old.
I’m not sure what my point in this post is. It may be that universal care in the United States is likely to continue to prove a hard sell.