The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Seventy years ago today the NHS was formed providing free health services under one umbrella. Pictured is a patient at Victoria Hospital in 1967.

- STEWART ALEXANDER

The nation must preserve and protect the NHS, the first baby born on the health service has said.

Aneira Thomas said the health service has touched the lives of every person in Britain.

The 69-year-old, who is celebratin­g her 70th birthday on July 5, said she is proud to be named after the founder of the health service Aneurin Bevan.

In an interview to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the creation of the health service, Mrs Thomas said if she could describe the difference the NHS has made to people’s lives in one word, it would be “safety”.

Her paternal grandmothe­r died at the age of only 34, leaving behind six small children. The names of four fullterm babies that died are also etched on her gravestone.

Mrs Thomas was born a minute past midnight on July 5 1948, and became the first baby born under the newly introduced National Health Service.

Nurses pleaded with her mother Edna to “hold on” until after midnight.

By doing so, the family saved one shilling and sixpence on midwifery fees.

After her birth at Amman Valley Hospital, Carmarthen­shire, the doctor and nurse who delivered Mrs Thomas asked her mother Edna whether they could name her and she agreed.

Just like Aneurin Bevan, Mrs Thomas is known to friends as Nye.

Mrs Thomas, who has been invited to a series of events on her 70th birthday, said: “I have been invited to Westminste­r Abbey but I’ve also been invited to York Minister and the Welsh Assembly. I’ve chosen the Welsh Assembly because I was made in Wales.

“I am heartened really by the invitation­s.

“Everybody is speaking about the NHS because it touches everybody’s lives.

“We must preserve it and protect it for future generation­s.

“I feel privileged to be part of it and I’m proud to be named after the founder Aneurin Bevan. “He was a great man. “He was the architect and the visionary who changed everybody’s life. Every person in Great Britain uses it.”

Mrs Thomas has two children and six grandchild­ren.

She added: “Every time I look at that statue (of Bevan) in Queen Street in Cardiff, it brings tears to my eyes with gratitude for what he has done for everybody. “I had my mother a long time. “She lived until she was 95, in comparison with my grandparen­ts.

“I never knew them because they died between the ages of 30 and 50.”

She added: “If I could describe what the NHS means in one word it would be ‘safety’.

“Before the NHS the local midwife was the neighbour next door.

“That was because women couldn’t afford healthcare and things often went wrong, dramatical­ly wrong, in labour.

“On my grandmothe­r’s grave, it says her name and also four babies, full term babies.”

Every time I look at that statue of Bevan in Queen Street, Cardiff, it brings tears to my eyes with gratitude for what he has done

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 ??  ?? Aneira Thomas says preserve and protect the NHS for future generation­s.
Aneira Thomas says preserve and protect the NHS for future generation­s.

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