...One of the fears underlying the Conservatives' opposition to the NHS was that when treatment was free, the feckless poor would rush in to strip the chemist shops of every pill on the shelves, then head for the dentists' surgeries to have their mouths filled with gold and silver. At first, it appeared that this might be happening. Spending during the NHS's first year vastly overshot the budget, and the prime minister, Clement Attlee, went on the radio to plead with people not to overburden the service.
The vast expense of the enterprise brought Bevan's ministerial career to a premature end. In 1951, the new Labour chancellor, Hugh Gaitskell, insisted on prescription charges, breaching Bevan's principle that care must be free. This incensed him.
Bevan had argued that the huge initial expense was the result of years of under-provision, when the dying bequeathed their spectacles to relatives who could not get prescriptions. By 1951, he had apparently been proved right, because the rush had died away, and he felt charges were a punishment unjustly imposed on patients who had behaved responsibly.
What Bevan and his allies failed to foresee was how advances in medical science would forever push up costs. After 60 years, it seems no amount of money will satisfy the infinite demand for better NHS care.
Soon after Bevan's resignation, the Labour government fell, their places taken by the Conservatives, who had opposed the creation of the NHS. Among the new Tory MPs was Charles Hill, the doctors' leader, now on the fast track to the cabinet. The issue of whether health care should be paid for out of general taxation was back on the agenda.
A Cambridge academic, Claude Guillebaud, led a committee to look at different ways to pay for the nation's health. To the government's surprise, the committee reported that the NHS was efficient, cost-effective, and deserved more money. The Tories accepted it with reasonably good grace, and did their best to forget they had ever opposed the NHS's creation. The principle of a free health service for all, paid for out of general taxation, had been won. The people had come to love their free NHS so much that no one could take it away.