National Hospital Service Reserve
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Hospital Service Reserve was a British civil defence organisation established under the Civil Defence Act 1948 to provide a reserve of trained nurses, midwives, ambulance staff and first aiders to supplement full-time staff in times of war. Recruitment began in 1949 and volunteers were required to carry out 48 hours of training per year, with which the British Red Cross, St John Ambulance Brigade and St Andrew's Ambulance Association voluntary organisations assisted. The NHSR had a target membership of 80,000 persons in peacetime, by March 1967 it mustered 69,335. The organisation was disbanded on 1 August 1968, with members directed towards alternative volunteering opportunities in hospitals.
The National Hospital Service Reserve (NHSR) was formed under the Civil Defence Act 1948, with recruitment starting on 15 November 1949.[1][2] Its foundation came at a time when British civil defence was shifting focus from dealing with the effects of conventional air raids to the aftermath of a nuclear attack.[3] The NHSR had its origins in a working party of the British Red Cross, St John Ambulance and War Office formed after the passing of the 1948 act to propose medical civil defence measures to operate during a large-scale war. The NHSR became one of four organisations expected to play a role in civil defence together with the Civil Defence Corps, also established in 1949; the Auxiliary Fire Service, which had been re-established in 1948, and the pre-existing Special Constabulary.[4]

