The full range of GCC sanctions from warning through to erasure, what each means for chiropractic registration and practice, what factors influence the sanction imposed, and how remediation evidence matters
The General Chiropractic Council's Professional Conduct Committee can impose a range of formal sanctions when a chiropractor's fitness to practise is found to be impaired. Understanding what each sanction means — and what influences the committee's decision — is essential for any chiropractor facing proceedings.
The GCC Professional Conduct Committee can impose the following formal sanctions:
The broader GCC fitness to practise framework — from referral through to committee hearing — is explained in the guide to GCC fitness to practise proceedings.
The GCC committee applies its sanctions guidance when determining the most appropriate outcome. The key factors considered are: the nature and seriousness of the concern; whether it was isolated or a pattern; the quality of insight demonstrated by the chiropractor; the remediation undertaken; the risk of repetition;
and the public interest in maintaining confidence in chiropractic practice.
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Understanding what fitness to practise means in this context — and how current fitness to practise is distinguished from past conduct — helps chiropractors frame their response to proceedings most effectively.
Strong, specific remediation evidence is the most powerful factor within the chiropractor's control in determining which sanction is imposed. CPD addressing the GCC Code of Practice and Standard of Proficiency relevant to the concern, completed early and presented with specific reflective notes, demonstrates genuine professional engagement.
A chiropractor who can show the committee that their practice has genuinely changed — supported by CPD evidence, supervisor reports, and audit data — is in a significantly stronger position for a proportionate sanction than one who presents only a factual response.
For cases involving HVT-related adverse events, specific CPD addressing technique safety, contraindication assessment, and informed consent for high-risk procedures carries particular evidential weight.
The guide to demonstrating remediation to your regulator provides the full framework for building effective evidence.
GCC conditions of practice orders restrict chiropractic practice in specific ways determined by the committee. Common conditions include: practice under the supervision of a named senior chiropractor with regular reports; restrictions on performing HVT or other specific techniques; mandatory CPD in specific areas; and
requirements to notify employers of the conditions order before commencing any new post. Full compliance is mandatory — breach of conditions is a fitness to practise matter that can trigger urgent further action.
Suspension removes the chiropractor from practice entirely for the order duration. It is reviewed at intervals — and the chiropractor can apply for early review where circumstances change materially. Erasure is permanent unless a restoration application succeeds.
A former registrant may apply for GCC restoration after a defined period, but restoration requires compelling evidence of fundamental professional change and is far from automatic.
The professional obligations and standards that apply during any conditions or suspension period remain important reference points throughout.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Australia can consult ethics training in Australia.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review professional development in New Zealand.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Chiropractic-specific CPD completed early and presented with reflective notes is the most effective step a chiropractor can take to support a proportionate sanction outcome.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →From least to most serious: a formal warning; conditions on registration; suspension; and erasure from the GCC register. Case examiners can also propose agreed outcomes including a warning without a full committee hearing.
A recorded outcome on the chiropractic register acknowledging that conduct fell below the required standard. Does not restrict practice. Appropriate for less serious, isolated concerns with demonstrated insight.
Formal restrictions on chiropractic practice — typically supervision requirements, HVT or other technique restrictions, CPD mandates, and notification obligations. Publicly recorded and compliance-monitored.
Prevents the chiropractor from practising in any GCC-regulated capacity for the order duration. Appropriate where conditions would not adequately protect the public but erasure is not required.
Removal from the GCC register. The most serious sanction. Reserved for the most serious cases. A former registrant may apply for GCC restoration after a defined period.
The seriousness of the concern, whether it was isolated or a pattern, the quality of insight, the remediation undertaken, the risk of repetition, and the public interest.
Yes — to the appropriate court. Specialist legal advice on appeal grounds and prospects is essential.
Strong, specific remediation evidence demonstrates reduced risk and genuine professional engagement. This is the most powerful factor within the chiropractor's control in influencing which sanction is imposed.
Yes — on the chiropractic register, visible to anyone searching it.
CPD addressing the GCC Code of Practice and Standard of Proficiency in the specific area of concern — HVT safety, consent, examination technique, record keeping, or professional behaviour as relevant.
Yes — within the specific restrictions imposed. Conditions restrict but do not prevent practice. Full compliance is mandatory.
Breach of conditions is a serious fitness to practise matter. The GCC can act urgently, including seeking an interim order preventing practice. Any uncertainty should be resolved with legal advice before taking any action.
The duration is determined by the committee. Suspension orders are reviewed at intervals. Application for early review is possible where circumstances change materially.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GCC regulatory proceedings.