In summer 1946, Orwell decamped to
Jura, an island in the west of Scotland. A boating accident did little for his health. In December 1947, he was in hospital in Glasgow.
Tuberculosis was diagnosed, and the request for permission to import
streptomycin to treat Orwell went as far as
Aneurin Bevan. After treatment, Orwell was able to return to Jura by the end of July 1948. In 1948, Bevan, formerly Orwell's colleague at
Tribune and now Minister of Health in the Labour government, instigated the British
National Health Service as publicly-funded medical provision for all. In January 1949, in a very weak condition, Orwell was taken to a
sanatorium in Gloucestershire, a series of small wooden chalets or huts near Stroud. Visitors were shocked by Orwell's appearance and concerned by the shortcomings and the ineffectiveness of the treatment. In late summer, Orwell was removed to
University College Hospital in London. In October he married
Sonia Brownell, who prepared plans to take him to the Swiss Alps. Orwell was getting weaker by the beginning of 1950. Sonia spent most of 20 January with Orwell in his private ward but left in the early evening to have dinner with
Lucian Freud and another friend. A visitor came and left a parcel outside the room in which Orwell was lying alone. Sometime early on Saturday morning, an artery burst in his lungs, and a few moments later he was dead, aged 46. Controversy surrounds Sonia's activities. Some say that she was at a nightclub and inaccessible. ==See also==