In a number of ways, the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS) is a unique experiment, springing from the fusion at the end of World War II of a number of synergistic elements: a powerful desire for social change; a determination on the part of the populace not to repeat the experience of the broken promises after World War I; the presence on the table in 1945 of a plan for social service reform, including health care, a plan made, remarkably, in the middle of the war; and the arrival on the scene of a single-minded, charismatic politician who saw the establishment of a national health service as his mission.