What GOsC conditions and suspension mean, what each requires, how to comply fully, what happens at review hearings, and how to build toward a positive review outcome
GOsC conditions of practice and suspension are the two most common restrictive outcomes in osteopathic fitness to practise proceedings. Both are remediable — but both require careful management and proactive professional development to achieve a positive review outcome. This guide explains what each means and how to navigate the conditions or suspension period effectively.
GOsC conditions of practice are formal restrictions imposed on an osteopath's professional practice — either as an agreed outcome at case examiner stage or by the Professional Practice Committee following a formal hearing.
Conditions restrict but do not prevent practice, and are publicly recorded on the osteopathic register for the duration of the order.
Conditions are appropriate where the concern is remediable but ongoing oversight is needed — the GOsC is not satisfied that the public would be adequately protected by the osteopath practising without restriction, but is satisfied that conditions can manage the risk without full removal from practice.
The full range of GOsC formal outcomes — including where conditions sit in relation to other sanctions — is set out in the GOsC sanctions guide.
The specific conditions imposed depend on the nature of the concern:
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Full compliance with every condition is a continuing regulatory obligation throughout the conditions period. Breach of conditions is a serious fitness to practise matter — the GOsC can act urgently, including seeking an interim suspension, if conditions are not being complied with. Practical compliance requirements:
Good clinical record keeping during the conditions period — including compliance documentation — is as important as record keeping in clinical practice.
GOsC suspension prevents the osteopath from practising in any capacity requiring GOsC registration for the duration of the order.
It is publicly recorded on the osteopathic register and visible to anyone who searches it. Suspension is imposed where conditions would not adequately protect the public — but where there is a realistic prospect of the osteopath demonstrating remediability within a defined period.
During suspension, the osteopath cannot work in any osteopathic role. The most productive approach is to treat the suspension period as an intensive period of professional development: completing CPD specifically addressing the concern; producing a genuine reflective account; arranging informal supervision where
possible; and building the evidence file that will be presented at the review hearing.
The guide to demonstrating remediation to your regulator provides the framework for building effective review evidence.
Both conditions orders and suspension orders are reviewed at regular intervals. At each review hearing, the panel assesses: whether the osteopath has complied fully with all conditions or order requirements; whether the underlying concerns have been genuinely addressed; whether the risk of repetition has been reduced;
and whether continued restriction is necessary to protect the public.
The evidence that carries most weight at review hearings is evidence that spans the entire period of the order — not just the final weeks. CPD completed progressively, supervisor reports produced at each session, and
a personal statement demonstrating genuine professional development throughout the period present a fundamentally stronger picture than evidence compiled at the last minute. The GOsC remediation evidence guide covers how to build this evidence file effectively.
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 Australia can review ethics training in Australia.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. CPD completed progressively during a conditions or suspension order — not crammed into the final weeks — demonstrates the sustained professional engagement that GOsC review panels look for.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Formal restrictions on osteopathic practice — supervision requirements, technique restrictions, CPD mandates, and notification obligations. Conditions restrict but do not prevent practice. They are publicly recorded and compliance-monitored.
Supervision conditions requiring practice under a named senior osteopath; technique restrictions preventing certain techniques (particularly HVT); CPD requirements in specific areas; and notification obligations to the GOsC and any employing organisation.
Yes — within the specific restrictions imposed. Full compliance is mandatory. You must not perform any restricted technique or work in any way that breaches the conditions.
Breach of conditions is a serious fitness to practise matter. The GOsC can act urgently, including seeking an interim suspension. Any uncertainty about what the conditions permit should be resolved with legal advice before taking any action.
A formal outcome preventing the osteopath from practising in any GOsC-regulated capacity for the duration of the order. Publicly recorded. Appropriate where conditions would not adequately protect the public.
Not in any role requiring GOsC registration. Any uncertainty about what is permitted should be resolved with legal advice.
Complete CPD specifically addressing the concern, produce a genuine reflective account, arrange informal supervision where possible, and build the evidence file for the review hearing. Treat the period as an intensive professional development opportunity.
The panel assesses full compliance, whether underlying concerns have been addressed, whether the risk of repetition has reduced, and whether continued restriction is necessary. The evidence produced during the conditions or suspension period determines the outcome.
The duration depends on the specific order and review outcomes. Both conditions and suspension are reviewed at regular intervals.
Yes — on the osteopathic register, visible to anyone searching it.
Yes — where the osteopath has complied fully and demonstrated genuine professional development, the panel may reduce the restrictions or remove conditions entirely.
Evidence spanning the entire conditions or suspension period — CPD completed progressively with specific reflective notes, contemporaneous supervision records, a personal statement demonstrating genuine change, and any audit evidence of current practice.
The GOsC's review processes allow for applications before the scheduled review date where circumstances change materially. Legal advice on whether an early review application is appropriate in specific circumstances is important.
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.