Abstract
Using previously unused or underused primary evidence, this article analyses the National Health Service in Scotland from its inception in 1947 to the reorganization of 1974. A thematic approach is adopted to show that, on the one hand, the Scottish health services were subject to similar Treasury constraints on expenditure as elsewhere in Great Britain; but that, on the other, there is a strong case for seeing the N.H.S. in Scotland as exhibiting a high degree of autonomy. It is further argued that this was, from the outset, justified and consolidated by the particular characteristics of Scottish history, geography and governance. © Institute of Historical Research 2003.
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CITATION STYLE
Stewart, J. (2003). The National Health Service in Scotland, 1947-74: Scottish or British? Historical Research, 76(193), 389–410. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.00182
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