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 | Từ điển Oxford Learners Wordfinder Dictionary 
 
	
		| National Health Service 
 
 the ˌNational ˈHealth Service  [National Health Service] BrE NAmE   noun singular  (abbr.NHS)
 the public health service in Britain that provides medical care and is paid for by taxes
 •I got my glasses on the National Health (Service).
 
 Culture:
 British people have strong feelings about the importance of the NHS, and it is always one of the top political issues in Britain. The National Health Service was introduced in  1946  by the  ↑Labour  government as part of the  ↑welfare state  system recommended in the  ↑Beveridge Report, and it came into operation in  1948. At first it provided free medical,  dental  and hospital services for everyone, but in  the 1960s  charges for medicines and  dental  services were introduced. Since then the cost of the NHS has continued to rise and governments have been forced to find new ways of paying for it. The  Conservative  government under Margaret Thatcher was accused of trying to  privatize  the NHS  (= sell it to private owners) after introducing  ↑hospital trusts  and ‘fundholding’  (= a system allowing doctors to control how they spend their funds), and encouraging the growth of private medical services and private medical insurance. There are now fewer NHS dentists, but treatment by doctors and hospitals is still free of charge to patients.
 See also ↑private patient
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