Abstract

For approximately eighty years following the creation of the embryonic profession of physiotherapy, advice on its development was almost exclusively requested and provided by nurses and doctors. The establishment of the National Health Service in 1948 facilitated opportunities for the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy to be consulted, because it represented the views and interests of most physiotherapists working within it. The formal input was largely limited to salary levels and structure through negotiations within the Whitley Council and its precursors.

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