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Decisions about practitioners

Each statutory regulator has a ‘fitness to practise’ process for handling complaints about health and care professionals. The most serious cases are referred to formal hearings in front of fitness to practise committees.

We review every final decision made by all those fitness to practise committees. If we decide the decisions do not protect the public properly we can refer them to Court to be considered by a judge. Our power to do this comes from the NHS Reform and Health Care Professions Act 2002.

Read cases we have considered recently, see which cases we have appealed and find out about previous cases below:

The regulators send us all of the decisions made by their final fitness to practise committees. If we are  concerned about their decision we hold a case meeting with our lawyers to decide whether to refer the case to Court. Read more

We can appeal the regulators' decisions. Read about cases we have appealed, see copies of judgements and Consent Orders and a list of hearings coming up. Read more

Use this section to find out about past cases. Read more

Fitness to practise - some frequently asked questions

Fitness to practise - legislation currently in effect

The NHS Reform and Health Care Professions Act 2002 has been amended since it was first introduced so for ease of reference we have produced an unofficial consolidated text version, which shows the legislation currently in effect. This incorporates all the amendments made to the Act up to 5 January 2016 from the General Medical Council (Fitness to Practise and Over-arching Objective), the Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care (References to Court) Order 2015, and the Health and Social Care (Safety and Quality) Act 2015. Please note, this consolidated version is an internal working document produced by our solicitors which has no official status. Users should consult an official version of the legislation for the purpose of interpreting and applying the law. The original versions of the legislation can be found on the legislation.gov website.

We are consulting

We are seeking views on draft good practice guidance developed as part of our work to support regulatory reform. The guides are aimed at supporting the regulators to use their new powers effectively and ensure public protection remains a key consideration. The deadline for responding is 15 April 2024. Find out more here.

Appealing fitness to practise decisions in practice

See how appealing final fitness to practise cases contributes to public protection in our case studies:

Find out more about the wider contribution our power to appeal/check final fitness to practise decisions makes in improving regulation and protecting the public.