Medicine Through TimeMemory Aid

Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts

Part of The NHSGCSE History

This memory aid covers Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts within The NHS for GCSE History. Revise The NHS in Medicine Through Time for GCSE History with 8 exam-style questions and 4 flashcards. This topic shows up very often in GCSE exams, so students should be able to explain it clearly, not just recognise the term. It is section 9 of 12 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.

Topic position

Section 9 of 12

Practice

8 questions

Recall

4 flashcards

🧠 Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts

Beveridge's Five Giants — "WIDSI":

  • W — Want (poverty)
  • I — Ignorance (lack of education)
  • D — Disease (poor health — the NHS tackles this one)
  • S — Squalor (slum housing)
  • I — Idleness (unemployment)

Say it as a word: "WIDSI" — or think of it as "What Is Disease Stopping Indeed?" The D is the one you need most often in NHS questions.

The NHS timeline — "42-45-46-48": Four dates that tell the whole story:

  • 1942 — Beveridge Report published (the blueprint)
  • 1945 — Labour wins general election in a landslide (the mandate)
  • 1946 — NHS Act passed through Parliament (the law)
  • 1948 — NHS launches on 5 July (the reality)

Remember it as "42-45-46-48" — the even numbers counting up. Six years from report to reality.

Bevan's Bargain — overcoming doctor opposition: The BMA said no three times. Bevan's solution had two parts: (1) he let doctors keep their private patients alongside NHS work, and (2) he paid doctors well through NHS salaries. He described this as "stuffing their mouths with gold." Doctors accepted a month before the NHS launched. This shows that the NHS required political skill, not just good intentions.

The impact numbers — "8 and 5": In the NHS's first year alone, 8 million people visited a dentist and 5 million pairs of glasses were prescribed. These numbers reveal the scale of unmet need before 1948 — millions of people had been going without dental and optical care simply because they could not afford it. If examiners ask you to describe the immediate impact of the NHS, these two statistics are your strongest evidence.

Visual association — "The Hospital and the Handshake": Picture a hospital (representing the existing wartime Emergency Medical Service, which the government already ran) and a handshake between Bevan and a reluctant doctor. The hospital shows that state healthcare had already been proved to work during WW2. The handshake shows that Bevan had to negotiate, not force, the medical profession into the NHS. Together they represent the two key ingredients: proof it could work + political skill to make it happen.

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in The NHS. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for The NHS

On what date was the National Health Service (NHS) officially launched?

  • A. 5 July 1945
  • B. 5 July 1948
  • C. 5 July 1942
  • D. 5 July 1950
1 markfoundation

Which document published in 1942 identified 'Five Giants' including Disease and laid the foundations for the NHS?

  • A. The Chadwick Report
  • B. The Dawson Report
  • C. The Beveridge Report
  • D. The Lloyd George Report
1 markfoundation

Quick Recall Flashcards

When was the NHS launched?
5 July 1948
Who was the Health Minister who created the NHS?
Aneurin Bevan

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