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The National Health Service [with Appendices I-XIV]

JAMA. 1949;141(6):424. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02910060062029.
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ABSTRACT

The authors state the purpose of this book as one of "explaining in language as simple as accuracy permits the anatomy and physiology of the National Health Service as it is at the outset of the Service" (p. vii). They have done that job well in so far as any law which deals with the details of personal lives can be couched in simple terms. The basic structure of the National Health Service stands out clearly from the mass of different committees, areas and schedules of fees.

The book deals mainly with the administrative functions of the service—the expropriation of existing institutions, the arrangements made to cover the interim period before the service could be completely organized, the composition and duties of the various bodies created to carry out the purposes of the law, the range of services to be available and the provisions for payment of practitioners and institutions.

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