Let’s not reach for the rose tinted glasses though.
It might also be useful, but depressing, to compare the situation today with the “cradle to grave” aspirations of the NHS’s founding fathers.
While nobody could have foreseen the astronomical rise in the price of treatments as those did not exist in 1948, and being committed to treat every body to the best of doctors’ ability must go hand in hand with a similar commitment to keeping up with costs. The change in the demographic has also played a significant part.
I feel it’s like “good news, bad news” when a revolutionary breakthrough in eg cancer treatment is announced, but cancer diagnoses are taking longer than ever, often precluding even the most rudimentary treatment.