MAJORITY REPORT.
administered by the Approved Societies. The latter would be
provided as an integral part of the medical service and would
be administered by the appropriate local authority. The general
practitioner, the midwife, the nurse, the specialist and the
institution would all take their respective parts in the scheme
of extended medical services.
SECTION D.—INTER-RELATIONS OF THE HEALTH
SERVICES.
115. To complete our review of the health services we naturally
pass on to consider the public medical services outside the
Insurance Scheme, and this leads inevitably to the extremely
important problem of co-ordination of the health services
generally. We have already, in Chapter IV, given a brief
description of these activities of the Central Government and the
various Tuocal Authorities. We may also refer to the detailed
accounts supplied by the Ministry of Health (App. CIV), the
Scottish Board of Health (App. CV), the Board of Hducation
(App. CIX) and Sir Thomas Legge (App. XLII). Naturally
we have not heard on these topics such a range and variety of
evidence as we have received on the Insurance medical service.
But we have been sufficiently informed of the nature of the
arrangements supervised by these Departments, and many
witnesses, e.g., the Society of Medical Officers of Health
(App. LVI) have directed our attention to these State activities
and have emphasised their intimate relation to the problem of
the future of public health work in the broadest significance of
that term. Here, again, as in the case of medical benefit,
we have been impressed by the social value of these various
activities, the great advances that have been made pari passu
with the development of the Insurance Scheme, and the possi-
bilities of expansion that are latent in these schemes if the
necessary public funds could be made available. Most important
of all, we have been impressed by the feeling that, in any further
developments, the need for close co-ordination between the health
work within the Insurance Scheme and that outside it, must
be continually kept in view both in the administration and in
the essentials of professional work.
116. We will refer, first, to the reports of the Consultative
Councils of the Ministry of Health and of the Scottish Board
of Health, made in 1920. In these reports the greatest emphasis
is laid upon local co-ordination of all the health services. The
former approach the subject on a theoretical basis and describe
what the organisation of a complete health service should be,
quite apart from existing systems and commitments. The latter
deal with the problem more in the practical sphere, and, taking
things as they are in Scotland, indicate the desirable lines of
progress. But in both the underlying principles are the same—
KATO