Bulk Buy Floating Button
GMC

How to Challenge an Interim Orders Tribunal (IOT) Decision

What grounds exist for challenging an IOT decision, the appeal process step by step, what evidence can help, how long interim orders last, and how to reduce the impact on your practice

Updated: April 2026|14 min read
⚠ Facing GMC proceedings? Build your professional evidence — 10 CPD courses for £500See Offer →

An interim orders tribunal decision can arrive with devastating speed — imposing suspension or conditions before the GMC investigation has reached any conclusion about the underlying allegations. Understanding that IOT decisions can be challenged, and knowing how to challenge them effectively, is essential for any doctor facing interim regulatory action. This guide explains the grounds for challenge, the process, and what evidence actually makes a difference.

What Is an Interim Orders Tribunal (IOT)?

An interim orders tribunal is a hearing convened by the MPTS to consider whether to impose temporary restrictions on a doctor's registration while a GMC fitness to practise investigation proceeds.

It is not a final hearing on the merits of the case — it is an urgent, preliminary assessment of whether immediate action is needed to protect the public or the wider public interest while the investigation is ongoing.

An IOT can impose two types of interim restriction: interim conditions of practice (restricting but not preventing clinical work) and interim suspension (preventing the doctor from practising in any capacity requiring GMC registration).

The GMC applies for an IOT where it considers the risk to patients or the public interest is such that action cannot wait for the conclusion of a full investigation.

The full guide to the interim orders tribunal process covers how IOT hearings work. This guide focuses specifically on how to challenge an IOT decision that has already been made.

CPD Courses for Doctors Facing GMC Proceedings

CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

1,000+
Professionals Trained
100%
Online
CPD
CPD CertifiedCertified by The CPD Certification Service
View All Courses →★ Bulk Buy 10 Courses for £500 →

Grounds for Challenging an IOT Decision

An IOT decision can be challenged on several grounds. The most important are:

  • The public protection or public interest threshold was not met. An interim order can only be imposed where the IOT is satisfied that it is necessary for the protection of members of the public, or is otherwise in the public interest, or is in the interests of the doctor. If the evidence before the IOT did not justify this threshold being met, the decision is challengeable.
  • The order was disproportionate. Even where some restriction was justified, the specific form of the order — for example, full suspension where conditions would have been sufficient — may be disproportionate to the assessed risk.
  • New evidence has emerged. Where evidence that was not before the original IOT panel has come to light — evidence that materially changes the risk assessment — this can ground an application for early review.
  • The doctor's circumstances have changed. Where the doctor has moved to a different practice environment, obtained supervision arrangements, or taken other steps that address the specific risks identified, a review of the order can be sought.
  • Procedural error. Where the IOT hearing did not follow the correct procedure — for example, where the doctor was not given adequate notice or an adequate opportunity to make representations — the decision may be challengeable on procedural grounds.

The IOT Appeal Process: Key Steps

There are two main routes for challenging an IOT decision: an internal review hearing before a fresh IOT panel, and statutory appeal to the Administrative Court.

The internal review route is the most commonly used and is the appropriate first step in most cases. A doctor can apply for a review of an interim order at any time —

and the MPTS must conduct a review at regular intervals (every six months for conditions, every three months for suspension). A review can also be sought urgently where new evidence or changed circumstances justify it.

At a review hearing, the panel considers whether the original order should be maintained, varied, or revoked.

The doctor can present new evidence, call witnesses, and make submissions about changed circumstances. The standard applied is the same as the original IOT — whether an order remains necessary for public protection or in the public interest.

The statutory appeal route — to the Administrative Court — is available where the doctor seeks to challenge the legal basis of the original IOT decision rather than seeking a review on the facts.

This route involves judicial review proceedings and requires specialist legal representation. It is less commonly used than internal review but is appropriate where a fundamental challenge to the decision is available.

What Evidence Can Help Challenge an Interim Order?

The strength of the challenge to an IOT decision depends heavily on the quality and specificity of the evidence presented. The most effective evidence addresses the specific basis on which the original order was made:

  • New clinical evidence. Independent medical opinion, occupational health assessment, or health monitoring evidence that contradicts or contextualises the risk assessed at the original IOT.
  • Supervision arrangements. Evidence that supervised practice arrangements are in place — a named clinical supervisor, a defined scope of practice, an agreed supervision plan — can support a variation from suspension to conditions, or from more restrictive to less restrictive conditions.
  • Character and competence evidence. References from senior colleagues, previous employer assessments, and records of clinical performance can address the risk assessment made at the original IOT.
  • CPD and professional development evidence. Evidence that the doctor has engaged proactively with professional development relevant to the concerns — including completed CPD courses — demonstrates that the risk profile has changed since the original order was made.
  • Changed circumstances. Where the doctor has moved to a different practice setting, changed employers, or made other structural changes that address the specific risks identified, this is directly relevant to whether the original order remains necessary.

How Long Does an IOT Decision Last?

Interim orders last for a maximum of 18 months in the first instance. They can be renewed by the MPTS for further periods of up to 12 months at a time, provided the full investigation has not yet concluded. In practice, interim orders often last for the duration of the investigation — which can be months or years in complex cases.

The doctor has the right to request a review of the order at any time — not just at the scheduled six-month or three-month review points. Where significant new evidence has emerged or circumstances have changed materially, an urgent review application should be made without waiting for the next scheduled review.

Reducing the Impact of an Interim Order on Your Practice

While challenging or reviewing the IOT decision, there are practical steps that can reduce its impact:

  • For interim conditions: Ensure compliance from day one. Arrange supervision before returning to practice. Notify employers as required by the conditions order. Keep a detailed compliance log from the first day of the order.
  • For interim suspension: Explore whether any non-clinical work — teaching, management, research, academic work — is permissible. Contact your MDO about income protection. Engage productively with professional development during the suspension period.
  • Financial support: Contact the BMA, your MDO, and if necessary a financial adviser about income protection options. The GMC suspension does not affect NHS pension entitlements accrued to date.

The guide to GMC sanctions and their implications provides broader context on what interim and final orders mean for a doctor's registration and practice.

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 Ireland can review professional development for doctors in Ireland.

Under an Interim Order? Build Your Challenge Evidence Now

10 CPD-certified courses for £500. CPD completed during an interim order period demonstrates proactive professional engagement — relevant evidence for any review or challenge hearing.

Bulk Buy 10 Courses →

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you challenge an interim orders tribunal decision?

Yes. An IOT decision can be challenged through an internal review hearing before a fresh IOT panel, or through statutory appeal to the Administrative Court. The internal review route is the most commonly used and is the appropriate first step in most cases.

What are the grounds for challenging an IOT decision?

The public protection or public interest threshold was not met; the order was disproportionate; new evidence has emerged that changes the risk assessment; the doctor's circumstances have changed materially; or there was a procedural error at the original IOT hearing.

How quickly can an IOT review hearing be obtained?

A review can be sought at any time — not just at the scheduled review intervals. Where new evidence or changed circumstances justify it, an urgent review application can be made. The MPTS must conduct reviews at regular intervals — every six months for conditions, every three months for suspension.

How long does a GMC interim order last?

Up to 18 months in the first instance. It can be renewed by the MPTS for further periods of up to 12 months at a time while the investigation is ongoing. In complex cases, interim orders can last for the full duration of the investigation.

What evidence is most effective at an IOT review?

Supervision arrangements that address the specific risks identified, independent medical evidence, character and competence references, CPD completed since the original order, and evidence of changed practice circumstances. The evidence must address the specific basis on which the original order was made.

Can supervision arrangements reduce the impact of an interim suspension?

Yes. Evidence that appropriate supervision arrangements are in place — a named supervisor, a defined scope of practice, an agreed supervision plan — can support a variation from suspension to conditions, allowing some clinical work to resume. This requires a review application and strong evidence.

What is the difference between an IOT review and an IOT appeal?

A review is an internal MPTS process — a fresh panel considers whether the order should be maintained, varied, or revoked. An appeal is a statutory challenge to the Administrative Court, challenging the legal basis of the original decision. Reviews are more common; appeals require specialist legal representation and are used for fundamental legal challenges.

Can I work in any capacity during a GMC interim suspension?

Not in any capacity requiring GMC registration. Some non-clinical work — teaching, management, research — may be possible depending on the terms of the suspension. Any work undertaken must be checked against the exact terms of the order. Breaching an interim suspension is a criminal offence.

Does an interim order affect my NHS pension?

An interim suspension does not affect NHS pension entitlements accrued up to the date of suspension. It may affect ongoing contributions where the doctor is not working. Specialist financial advice — including from the BMA — is advisable.

Should I get legal representation for an IOT hearing?

Yes. Specialist legal representation at the IOT — and at any review hearing — is essential. The IOT panel applies the public protection standard and can impose immediate suspension. The quality of the representations made at the hearing can make a material difference to the outcome.

What happens if I breach an interim order?

Breaching an interim suspension is a criminal offence under the Medical Act 1983. Breaching interim conditions is a serious regulatory concern that the GMC can act on urgently. Any uncertainty about what the interim order permits should be resolved with legal advice before returning to any clinical activity.

Can a patient complaint trigger an IOT without the full investigation starting?

Yes. The GMC can apply for an IOT at any stage of the process — including before a full investigation has been opened. In urgent cases involving serious allegations, the IOT can be convened within days of the complaint being received.

What is the role of my MDO at an IOT hearing?

Your medical defence organisation provides support and, usually, legal representation at IOT hearings. Contact your MDO immediately on receiving notice of an IOT application — before any hearing takes place. In some cases, independent specialist legal representation may also be advisable alongside MDO support.

Disclaimer

This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you are facing GMC fitness to practise proceedings, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings.