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Queen awards George Cross to NHS

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Queen Elizabeth has awarded the George Cross to the NHS, in recognition of 73 years of dedicated service including during the Covid-19 pandemic.

In a handwritten note the Queen said the award was given to all NHS staff — past and present — for their “courage, compassion and dedication”.

This is only the third time in its 80-year history that the highest civilian gallantry award — bestowed for acts of the greatest heroism or most conspicuous courage — has been given collectively.

Prime minister Boris Johnson said the award was a symbol of the nation’s gratitude to the health service staff.

“NHS staff have cared for us and our friends and family on the frontline of a pandemic for over a year, and I have witnessed their courage first-hand,” Johnson, who was treated by the NHS in intensive care when he was infected with Covid-19 last year, said.

“I know the whole of the UK is behind me in paying tribute and giving thanks for everything the NHS has done for us, not only in the last year, but since its inception.”

The NHS was established in 1948 as the centrepiece of social reforms following World War Two, with a mission to provide state-funded comprehensive universal healthcare.

NHS chief executive Sir Simon Stevens said the honour recognised the skill, compassion and fortitude of staff right across the service in responding to the worst pandemic in a century.

“Out of those dark times have come the best of what it means to be a carer and a health professional,” he said.

“In the face of adversity we have seen extraordinary team work, not just across the NHS but involving hundreds of thousands of volunteers, millions of carers, key workers and the British public who have played an indispensable role in helping the health service to look after many hundreds of thousands of seriously ill patients with coronavirus.”

The George Cross was first bestowed collectively to the people of Malta in 1942 by Queen Elizabeth’s father, King George VI, and to the Royal Ulster Constabulary by the queen in 1999.

(With Reuters)

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