The University of Liverpool’s Professor Sally Sheard presents a major Radio 4 series on the NHS
Posted on: 13 June 2018 by Nick Jones in 2018 Posts
The University of Liverpool’s Professor Sally Sheard has recorded a provocative twenty part series for BBC Radio 4 featuring key moments in the NHS’s history. Beginning on 18 June, it covers the poor healthcare available before the NHS, its difficult birth in 1948, and key achievements and challenges.
Working with BBC producer Beth Eastwood, Sally has drawn on historic audio archive material, including recordings of speeches given by its visionary founders William Beveridge and Aneurin Bevan to create National Health Stories.
Professor Sheard commented:
‘It’s been a huge privilege to write and present this series for BBC Radio 4, but I found it difficult to choose just twenty key stories to represent the NHS’s 70 years. Some of the highlights for me were listening to the first patients to have kidney dialysis, and the hidden voices of patients in long-stay mental health institutions in the 1960s. People think they know the NHS, but I hope this series will surprise them. For example, the Treasury hindered health education campaigns publicising the link between smoking and lung cancer in the 1950s, because it needed the tobacco revenue to fund the NHS. The introduction of the contraceptive pill is another unfamiliar story, especially how some places, including Liverpool, conducted aggressive family planning campaigns in the 1970s targeting women who had large numbers of babies.’
Sally interviewed former leaders of the medical profession, healthcare pioneers, and nurses who took on key management roles. A common theme through the twenty stories is the constant concern about funding – right from the start of the service in 1948. Several of the episodes focus on difficult decisions that were made about who to treat and how to pay for the NHS.
National Health Stories is on BBC Radio 4 each weekday at 1.45pm from 18 June to 13 July.
It is also available through the BBC iPlayer and as weekend omnibus editions. You can listen online here.
Sally Sheard is the Andrew Geddes and John Rankin Professor of Modern History at the University of Liverpool. She has researched and published on health policy development and the role of expert advisers. She is currently leading a five year project funded by the Wellcome Trust, The Governance of Health: medical, economic and managerial expertise in Britain since 1948. She regularly appears on TV and Radio programmes, including BBC 2’s A House Through Time and BBC 1’s Who Do You Think You Are?
Keywords: Medical Humanities Research Theme.