GMC Solicitors for Disciplinary & Criminal GMC Investigations
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GMC Solicitors & Lawyers. Experts in Legal Advice for Doctors & GMC Investigations
Our GMC Lawyers provide expert legal advice to Doctors facing investigation by the General Medial Council.
Our specialist GMC Lawyers have the experience, knowledge and technical ability to guide and support you through a GMC Investigation, including subsequent hearings or proceedings. We pride ourselves on our client care, attention to detail and pragmatic approach.
We understand the anxiety and distress that a referral to the GMC may cause you. We know that professional disciplinary proceedings can have life-changing consequences in terms of reputation and your ability to practise.
We help with:
- Leagl advice & representation across the entire GMC investigation process
- Expert representation and response to allegations at the GMC investigatory stage, including Rule 7 letters;
- MPTS & GMC fitness to practise panel hearings;
- Interim Order Hearings & High Court applications to extend interim orders;
- Cases including misconduct, health, convictions, unacceptable professional conduct, lack of competence and deficient professional performance;
- Appealing committee decisions;
- MPTS / GMC Registration appeals;
- Restoration hearings;
- Police investigations & PACE Interview Representation;
- Coroners Court Representation.
Who we help:
- Doctors who are working in the NHS;
- Doctors in private practice;
- Doctors referred to the General Medical Council (GMC) for investigation into allegations that their fitness to practise is impaired.
- Medical practitioners at all career levels;
- Student Doctors subject to University fitness to practise hearings;
Based in Stockport and Manchester, our GMC Lawyers & Solicitors represent doctors in GMC Investigations and hearings across England & Wales.
Fitness to Practice GMC Investigations
The GMC will investigate a doctor if they receive a referral that calls a doctor’s ‘fitness to practise’ into question.
A doctor’s fitness to practise may be found to be impaired because of any, or all, of the following:
- Misconduct (professional or personal).
- Deficient professional performance.
- Physical or mental ill health.
- A criminal conviction or caution.
- Not having the necessary knowledge of English to safely practise medicine in the UK.
- A determination by another regulatory body either in the UK or overseas.
On receipt of a referral about a doctor, the GMC will consider if the concern raises a question of impairment.
The GMC will make provisional enquiries and may then:
- conclude the matter at the triage stage.
- refer the matter for investigation and a decision by the Case Examiners, or
- refer it direct to a Medical Practitioners Tribunal (MPT) for adjudication.
GMC Investigation Process
If you have been referred to the GMC, it is vital that you seek specialist legal advice from a GMC Lawyer immediately. Many cases can be resolved at an early stage provided that the correct tactical decisions are taken as well as carefully drafted formal responses.
You will be informed in writing by the GMC that a complaint has been made and you will be invited to respond. A response is not mandatory, but it is advisable to seek advice from a specialist GMC Lawyer at this stage.
The GMC, dependent on the circumstances of the case, will then obtain different types of evidence. This may include; medical records, witness statements from the complainant/employer/colleagues, expert reports and assessments of your performance or health and knowledge of the English language.
The GMC will investigate cases to assess whether they should be referred to the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service.
The GMC will then write to you (known as a rule 7 letter) setting out the allegations made in the complaint and asking you to comment. You will be given 28 days to respond to this letter. Doctors should as per paragraph 23a of the Good Medical Practice, cooperate with investigations conducted by the GMC.
We strongly advise you to seek specialist legal advice from a GMC Lawyer at this stage if you haven’t already done so. The GMC expects doctors to show insight and reflection and show that they have acted to remedy any deficiencies. Such insight and remediation often result in a better outcome.
The case and the evidence will then be considered by two Case Examiners; one medical and one lay member.
The Case Examiners will decide whether to:
- conclude the case by taking no action.
- offer a warning.
- agree undertakings with you (for example, practising under supervision or restricting areas of practice).
- refer the matter to the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service for a fitness to practise hearing.
GMC Interim Orders Panel
The Interim Orders Tribunal (IOT) may suspend, or impose conditions upon, a doctor’s registration on an interim basis pending completion of the investigation and/or hearing of the case. These hearings will usually be heard in private and will only be imposed where it is ‘necessary for the protection of members of the public or is otherwise in the public interest, or is in the interests of a fully registered person’.
The IOT may impose an interim order for an initial period of up to 18 months. Any interim order is subject to periodic review; it must be reviewed within six months of the order being made, and thereafter usually every six months. The doctor may, after three months, request an earlier review. An order may be reviewed whenever new evidence relevant to the order becomes available which suggests that the order ought to be reviewed.
Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS)
Once a case has been referred to the MPTS to arrange a hearing, the registrar may carry out further investigations to fully prepare the case for hearing.
You will be invited to take part in the GMC’s pre-hearing processes which include the setting of a timetable for disclosure and a listing window for the hearing.
An MPTS panel is made up of at least one lay member and one medical tribunal member, and a chair, who may be a legally qualified chair.
The GMC will present evidence and make submissions relating to any allegation(s) in dispute. Both parties may then make submissions as to the facts to be found proven in light of the evidence received by the MPT.
The MPT then considers and decides whether the disputed facts are proved.
Where some, or all, of the facts, are admitted or found proven, the MPT receives further evidence and hears submissions, first from the GMC’s representative and then from you, as to whether based on the facts found proved, your fitness to practise is impaired.
If the MPT concludes that your fitness to practise is not impaired, it may invite submissions on whether a warning should be issued to you.
If the MPT concludes that your fitness to practise is impaired, it then hears further evidence and submissions from both parties relating to sanction.
GMC Sanctions
Having heard the evidence and submissions, the MPT will consider whether to impose a sanction on your registration. It will announce its decision in open session and must give reasons for the decision.
If the MPT decide to impose a sanction on your registration, it will then invite further submissions on whether to impose an immediate order on your registration. It will then consider and decide whether to impose an immediate order.
If your fitness to practise is found to be impaired, the tribunal must impose the minimum sanction necessary to ensure the public is protected.
The following sanctions are available:
- impose a period of conditions on your registration for up to three years
- a suspension of your registration for up to 12 months, or
- direct that your name shall be erased from the medical register, except where the allegations relate solely to your health or to your knowledge of the English language. If your name is erased from the medical register, you will not be allowed to apply for re-registration for at least 5 years.
GMC Appeals
A doctor may appeal to the High Court against any sanction imposed but must do so within 28 days. The GMC also has the right to appeal decisions made by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service.
How can we help?
Our experienced GMC Investigation Lawyers provide expert advice and representation to doctors facing investigations by the GMC in the following ways:
- Representing doctors accused of criminal offences including at the police station and Court.
- Offering practical, strategic advice.
- Representing doctors subject to criticism during an inquest.
- Advising in respect of the suitability of warnings and undertakings.
- Providing specialist advice in respect of GMC investigations.
- Preparation of responses to rule 7 letters.
- Assistance at Interim Orders Tribunals Hearings.
- Representation before the MPTS re fitness to practise hearings.
- Advising on appeals to the High Court against sanctions imposed by the MPTS.
We can tailor our service to the individual needs of each client so please call to discuss your situation and find out how we can help.
Why choose us?
We have a wealth of experience defending professionals who have been referred to their regulatory body. We provide a platinum service that includes robust, strategic advice, hard work, tenacity and a desire to win.
Our Defence Lawyers for Doctors offer a bespoke service, aimed specifically at the circumstances of each individual case.
With over 35 years of experience defending clients in regulatory investigations, we are leading GMC Investigation Solicitors in the UK, operating nationally from our offices in Manchester and Stockport.
Contact our GMC Lawyers today for a free consultation.
Need some professional advice?
Do you have any issues that you are worried about? Contact our professional team for a free, no-obligation informal discussion, where we can discuss your particular requirements in greater detail.