What remediation evidence the GOsC expects from osteopaths, which CPD carries most weight, how to build and present a complete remediation file, and what makes evidence genuinely credible
For any osteopath facing GOsC fitness to practise proceedings, remediation evidence is the most consequential tool available. It is what demonstrates to case examiners and the Professional Practice Committee that the concerns have been genuinely addressed and the risk of repetition is low. This guide explains what effective GOsC remediation evidence contains.
GOsC remediation evidence is the documentary proof that an osteopath has genuinely engaged with the concerns raised in fitness to practise proceedings. It answers the question that case examiners and the committee are asking: what has this osteopath done since the concern arose, and what has specifically changed?
The GOsC assesses remediation evidence as a primary indicator of current fitness to practise. Strong, specific, early evidence consistently correlates with less serious outcomes — and with the ability to achieve a resolved case at case examiner stage rather than referral to the full Professional Practice Committee.
Understanding the full framework for demonstrating remediation to your regulator provides the foundation for building an effective evidence file.
The single most important characteristic of effective GOsC remediation evidence is timing. Evidence of professional development begun on receipt of the GOsC correspondence —
or before — carries substantially more weight than the same development begun in the weeks before a hearing. The GOsC — like all healthcare regulators — treats early, sustained engagement as a marker of genuine motivation rather than strategic regulatory compliance.
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

CPD addressing the specific GOsC Standard of Proficiency relevant to the concern carries the most evidential weight. The Standard of Proficiency covers clinical knowledge, patient management, communication, consent, record keeping, professional behaviour, and
continuing professional development. Identifying the most directly relevant standard and completing targeted CPD in that area demonstrates specific professional awareness.
For osteopath-specific concerns — HVT safety, cranial osteopathic technique, diagnostic assessment, or referral decisions —
CPD through the Institute of Osteopathy or specialist osteopathic providers addresses the profession-specific standard directly. Broader professional ethics and professionalism CPD provides the foundational professional values context.
All CPD must be accompanied by specific reflective notes explaining the connection between the course content and the specific GOsC concern. The importance of informed consent in healthcare provides useful context for consent-related CPD reflections.
A genuine reflective statement is an essential component of GOsC remediation evidence. It must be specific, honest, and directly connected to the GOsC Standard at issue.
The most effective reflective statements address: what happened and which Standard was not met; why it was not met; the impact on the patient; what the osteopath now understands differently; and what specific changes have been made in clinical practice.
The guide to writing a reflective statement for regulatory proceedings provides the detailed framework.
Evidence from a senior colleague or clinical supervisor who has observed the osteopath's practice during the remediation period carries significant weight — particularly for HVT safety, examination technique, and consent concerns.
A supervisor report specifically addressing the GOsC concern raised is far more persuasive than a general character reference. Arrange supervision as early as possible — and document every session contemporaneously.
The complete GOsC remediation file should contain: CPD certificates with specific reflective notes (chronologically organised); the reflective statement; supervisor reports; significant event analyses where relevant; audit evidence of current clinical standards; and a personal development plan.
All documents must be consistent with each other and submitted before the case examiner review. The GOsC case examiners assess the file as a whole — coherence and credibility across all documents matters as much as any individual piece of evidence.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Ireland can consult ethics training in Ireland.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review professional development in New Zealand.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Osteopath-specific CPD completed from the first day of an investigation — presented with specific reflective notes — is the most effective evidence any osteopath can produce.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Documentary proof that an osteopath has genuinely engaged with the concerns raised — through CPD, reflective practice, practice changes, and supervisor oversight. It demonstrates that concerns have been addressed and the risk of repetition is low.
From day one — on receipt of the first GOsC correspondence. Early evidence carries substantially more weight than evidence compiled in the weeks before a hearing.
CPD directly addressing the GOsC Standard of Proficiency relevant to the specific concern — HVT safety, consent, examination technique, record keeping, or professional behaviour. Osteopath-specific CPD through the Institute of Osteopathy provides the strongest profession-specific evidence.
Yes. CPD certificates alone are not sufficient. A specific, honest reflective statement demonstrating genuine insight is an essential component of effective GOsC remediation evidence.
Yes — and they carry significant weight where clinical practice is in issue. A supervisor report specifically addressing the GOsC concern is far more persuasive than a general character reference.
CPD certificates with specific reflective notes (chronologically organised), the reflective statement, supervisor reports, significant event analyses, audit evidence of current practice, and a personal development plan.
Very specific. Each note should identify what was learned from the course, how it relates to the specific GOsC Standard at issue, and what has changed in clinical practice as a result.
Yes. A clinical audit specifically addressing the concern — demonstrating current practice consistently meets GOsC standards — provides independent documentary evidence that the concern has been addressed.
Timing. Evidence of professional development begun immediately on receipt of GOsC correspondence carries substantially more weight than the same development begun in the final weeks before a hearing. Early, sustained engagement is the strongest signal of genuine motivation.
Not strictly required, but strongly recommended. A credible PDP demonstrates forward-looking professional commitment beyond the immediate investigation.
A structured review of the clinical incident under investigation — identifying what happened, why, what was done, and what has changed. A well-documented SEA demonstrates genuine professional engagement with the concern and is compelling evidence for the GOsC.
The reflective learning can contribute to CPD records. However, the GOsC regulatory reflective statement serves a specific regulatory purpose and should be written specifically for that context.
Against the same framework as all regulatory evidence: is it specific and directly connected to the concern? Was it compiled progressively or crammed into the final weeks? Does it demonstrate genuine insight or a formulaic response?
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GOsC regulatory proceedings.