How UK healthcare works
A descriptive series on the structure and economics of the UK's National Health Service and its parallel private system. How GPs are paid, how specialists are trained, what NICE does, who regulates whom, and why the system feels the way it does.
Dr Seth Rankin
MBChB MRCGP. Founder of LoveMyLife. Former NHS Commissioner and Managing Partner of Wandsworth Medical Centre.
23 April 2026
The United Kingdom's National Health Service (NHS) is a specific piece of architecture, with a specific history, specific funding, specific regulation, and a specific way of paying the doctors who staff it. Understanding the architecture explains a great deal of how UK healthcare feels in practice.
This series is the explanatory counterpart to Navigating UK healthcare. It is for readers who want to know how the system works under the bonnet. Written from the inside, bylined Dr Seth Rankin.
How the NHS pays its doctors. The voice anchor for the series. Capitation, the independent-contractor model, salaried consultants, the training and pay pattern, and the NHS/social-care boundary.
A brief history of the NHS. From the 1942 Beveridge Report to the 2022 Integrated Care Boards.
How the NHS is funded. General taxation, National Insurance Contributions, the DHSC settlement, and the 2025 Spending Review.
How much the NHS costs, and what it buys. Value for money: OECD comparison, outcomes, NICE.
How UK doctors are trained. Medical school, Foundation Programme, GP or specialty training, CCT, the Specialist Register.
The UK's medical regulators and royal colleges. The GMC, the royal colleges, and the other statutory bodies that govern UK clinicians.
How UK consultants divide time between NHS and private practice. The 1948 compromise and the modern consultant contract.
Structure of the NHS. DHSC, NHS England, Integrated Care Boards, trusts, Primary Care Networks, general practices, regulators, and national bodies.
Why the NHS uses GPs as gatekeepers. The clinical and economic case, and the honest limits.
International models of primary-care gatekeeping. How other OECD countries do the same job.
How NICE decides what the NHS adopts. Technology appraisals, cost-per-QALY, the statutory funding duty.
How the UK private healthcare sector is structured. Hospital groups, PPUs, consulting rooms, diagnostics, primary care, insurers.
Why UK private healthcare has always been secondary, not primary. The historical asymmetry and what is changing.
When private hospitals transfer to the NHS. The complexity backstop and the regulatory architecture behind it.
Multifactorial conditions and the generalist consultation. The clinical discipline of generalism, and when a longer consultation matters.
The standard NHS GP consultation. The ten-minute slot: history, structure, what fits, and what does not.
Universal healthcare and the question of convenience. The structural trade-off at the heart of a tax-funded universal system.
Dr Seth Rankin is a London-based general practitioner with twenty-plus years of practice across NHS and private settings, nine years as an NHS Commissioner, and previous roles in cross-border healthcare at International SOS. Full background.
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