What counts as dishonesty under Good Medical Practice, how the investigation works, the sanctions that follow, and how to demonstrate insight
Dishonesty is one of the most serious categories of allegation a doctor can face at the GMC. It is treated differently from clinical errors, investigated more rigorously, and results in more severe sanctions more often. This guide explains what counts as dishonesty, how the GMC investigates it, what outcomes follow, and what it takes to demonstrate genuine insight.
Dishonesty in GMC regulation is broader than most doctors assume. GMC Good Medical Practice requires doctors to be honest in all professional dealings — with patients, colleagues, employers, and the regulator itself.
Any departure from that standard, in any professional context, can constitute a dishonesty concern.
The GMC does not limit dishonesty to the clinical setting. Dishonesty in financial dealings, research, applications for posts, and communications with the GMC all fall within scope.
A doctor who makes a false declaration on a job application faces the same category of allegation as one who falsifies clinical records.
The GMC's probity standards require doctors to be honest and trustworthy at all times. Probity is described in Good Medical Practice as fundamental to the doctor-patient relationship and to public confidence in the profession.
This is why dishonesty allegations carry consequences that can far exceed the significance of the underlying act.
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Dishonesty allegations that reach the GMC take many forms. The most common categories are:
The GMC treats dishonesty as one of the most serious categories of concern — often more serious than clinical errors of equivalent impact. The reason is straightforward: a clinical error can be remediated through training and supervision. Dishonesty raises questions about character that are not so easily addressed.
The MPTS has repeatedly held that deliberate or sustained dishonesty is fundamentally incompatible with medical registration.
A finding of dishonesty does not require patient harm. The damage to public confidence in the profession is itself a ground for serious regulatory action.
A related guide to how dishonesty is treated across healthcare regulation provides useful comparative context. The GMC's approach is among the most stringent of all UK healthcare regulators — reflecting the particular trust placed in doctors by patients and the public.
A GMC dishonesty investigation follows the standard fitness to practise pathway but involves more detailed evidence-gathering than most other allegation types.
The GMC has broad statutory powers to obtain records — clinical notes, financial records, employment documentation, prescribing data, and correspondence can all be obtained and reviewed.
The investigation process:
Throughout the investigation, the doctor's own conduct is closely observed. Honesty in dealing with the GMC during an investigation into dishonesty is not merely expected — it is actively assessed. Any attempt to mislead the investigation itself becomes an additional and potentially determinative finding.
The range of GMC sanctions available following a dishonesty finding covers the full spectrum — but the outcomes in practice are heavily weighted towards the serious end.
Insight in a dishonesty case is both the most important and the most difficult element to establish. The tribunal is not looking for acknowledgment — it is looking for evidence of genuine understanding of why the conduct was fundamentally wrong, what it meant for the trust placed in the doctor, and why it will not recur.
Superficial expressions of remorse consistently fail to satisfy MPTS tribunals. The reflective statement in a dishonesty case must go further than in other categories.
It must address not just what happened and why, but demonstrate genuine understanding of the values that underpin medical registration and the specific damage dishonesty causes to public trust.
Completing relevant CPD — particularly in professional ethics and GMC probity standards — contributes to the evidence base.
Courses completed before the hearing carry significantly more weight than those completed after. They demonstrate genuine engagement with professional values rather than a strategic response.
See the guide to demonstrating insight to the GMC for a detailed framework applicable to dishonesty cases.
GMC findings in dishonesty cases are shared with overseas regulatory bodies and can affect registration in other jurisdictions.
UK-registered doctors can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Doctors with connections to Australia can consult ethics training for Australian doctors.
Those with connections to Canada can review professional development for Canadian doctors.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Demonstrate genuine engagement with professional ethics and probity before the hearing — not after.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Any departure from the honesty and trustworthiness standards in GMC Good Medical Practice. This includes falsifying clinical records, fraudulent financial claims, forged documents, dishonest applications for posts, misleading the GMC during an investigation, research misconduct, and dishonesty in prescribing.
Dishonesty raises fundamental questions about character that cannot easily be remediated through training. The GMC's probity standards treat honesty as fundamental to the doctor-patient relationship and public confidence in the profession. A clinical error can be addressed through supervision — a finding of deliberate dishonesty calls into question whether the doctor can be trusted at all.
The MPTS tribunal considers impairment and sanctions. Erasure is the most common outcome for deliberate or sustained dishonesty. Suspension may follow for isolated or contextually driven dishonesty with compelling insight. Conditions of practice are rare in dishonesty cases.
Yes. Deliberate, sustained, or serious dishonesty — particularly where it involves an abuse of the doctor's professional position or misleading the regulatory system — frequently results in erasure. The MPTS has consistently held that certain categories of dishonesty are fundamentally incompatible with continued registration.
Clinical records, financial records, employment documentation, prescribing data, correspondence, and communications with the GMC itself. The GMC has broad statutory powers to obtain records from employers, NHS bodies, banks, and other institutions.
Go well beyond acknowledgment. A genuine reflective statement must address why the conduct was fundamentally wrong, what it meant for the trust placed in the doctor by patients and the profession, and why it will not recur — demonstrating a real and sustained change in approach to professional values, not a strategic expression of remorse.
It is possible but less common than in other categories. Dishonesty cases often involve significant factual dispute — and an agreed outcome requires the doctor to accept the factual basis of the allegation. Where facts are denied, referral to tribunal is the usual path.
Yes. The GMC's Good Medical Practice standards require honesty in all professional dealings — including financial matters, research, applications for posts, and communications with regulatory bodies. Dishonesty in any of these contexts can constitute a fitness to practise concern.
Probity is the GMC's term for the overarching standard of honesty and integrity expected of all registered doctors. It encompasses truthfulness, openness, and trustworthiness in all professional contexts. Good Medical Practice describes probity as the foundation of public trust in the medical profession.
Yes, subject to a successful review hearing. The review tribunal will assess compliance during the suspension period, the quality of insight demonstrated, and any remediation completed. In dishonesty cases, the bar at review is high — the tribunal must be satisfied that the honesty concerns have been genuinely addressed.
Courses in professional ethics, GMC probity standards, integrity in clinical practice, and insight and remediation. Completing them before the hearing rather than after demonstrates genuine proactive engagement with professional values. Our GMC remediation courses are specifically designed for this context.
Yes. Falsifying, amending, or backdating clinical records — particularly following an adverse event — is one of the most serious forms of dishonesty recognised by the GMC. It directly undermines patient safety investigation processes and the trust placed in clinical documentation.
Variable — from months to several years in cases involving criminal proceedings, complex financial records, or multiple allegations. Throughout the investigation, maintaining honest and open engagement with the GMC process is essential and is itself assessed as part of the overall picture.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you are facing a GMC dishonesty allegation, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings immediately.