Every optometrist and dispensing optician facing GOC proceedings needs to know which CPD evidence carries real weight — and which does not. This guide explains exactly what the GOC and its case examiners look for, so you can focus your time and money where it matters most.
If you are facing a GOC investigation, or want to prepare in case one ever arises, understanding which CPD evidence actually carries weight with the GOC case examiners is the most valuable knowledge you can have. Not all CPD is equal — and the difference between the CPD that changes case outcomes and the CPD that gets ignored is something every optical professional should understand.
GOC case examiners assess remediation evidence at a critical fork in the road: is this case resolved here — with a warning or agreed outcome — or does it need to go to a full committee hearing? The difference between those two outcomes is enormous — in terms of stress, cost, public exposure, and professional impact.
CPD evidence is consistently one of the most influential factors in that assessment. A compelling CPD file can be the difference between a case closing at case examiner stage and a case proceeding to public committee hearing.
But only if the CPD is the right CPD, presented the right way. The guide to the GOC case examiner stage explains exactly how this assessment works.
When GOC case examiners review a CPD evidence file, they are not just counting certificates. They are assessing three specific things:
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

The most effective CPD for GOC remediation directly addresses the GOC Standards of Practice — the document against which all GOC fitness to practise assessments are made. The standards cover patient care, clinical examination, consent, record keeping, professional behaviour, confidentiality, and continuing professional development.
Courses that address these standards specifically — in the context of optical practice — carry the highest evidential weight. Professional ethics and professionalism CPD for optometrists and dispensing opticians provides the foundational professional values context that underpins every GOC standard.
All our courses are certified by the CPD Certification Service — independently accrediting the quality of the learning, which matters when certificates are presented to GOC case examiners.
For cases involving consent: CPD specifically addressing informed consent in optical practice, the legal basis for consent, and how consent should be documented. For cases involving record keeping: CPD in clinical record keeping standards and documentation requirements.
For cases involving professional conduct or boundaries: ethics and professionalism CPD for optical professionals. The guide to building GOC remediation evidence sets out the complete framework.
Presenting CPD certificates as a bare list with no context is the single most common CPD evidence mistake in GOC proceedings.
A bare certificate tells the case examiner that you completed a course. It does not tell them what you learned, how it relates to the concern, or what has changed in your practice as a result. That additional information is what transforms a certificate into evidence.
For each CPD certificate you present, add a brief reflective note — two or three short paragraphs maximum —
explaining: what the course covered; what you specifically learned that was most relevant to the concern raised; and one or two concrete ways your practice has changed as a result. This turns a box-ticking exercise into genuine evidence of professional development.
Present all CPD certificates chronologically — from earliest to most recent — to demonstrate that engagement was sustained over the investigation period, not crammed into the final weeks.
The overall evidence file should tell a coherent story: this professional received a concern, took it seriously immediately, engaged with targeted professional development, and their practice is now demonstrably stronger.
There is no magic number. Case examiners are not counting certificates — they are assessing the overall quality and relevance of the professional development picture.
For a straightforward isolated concern with no dishonesty element, two to three directly relevant courses completed early in the investigation period is typically sufficient as part of a broader remediation file.
For more serious cases — particularly those involving a pattern of concern or cases that are heading toward committee — four to six courses completed across the investigation period provides a stronger evidence base. Our Bulk Buy offer —
10 CPD courses for £500 — is specifically designed for optical professionals building a comprehensive remediation file. Ten relevant courses completed progressively over the investigation period is one of the most compelling CPD evidence bases any GOC case can present.
If there is one thing to take from this guide, it is this: start CPD today. Not next week. Not when you know the investigation is proceeding. Today. Every week of genuine professional development documented before a GOC hearing adds to the persuasive weight of your case.
Every week of delay makes the remaining evidence slightly less convincing. The GOC fitness to practise process can take months — which means every month of early CPD is a month of evidence that could not have been faked at the last minute.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Canada can consult professional development in Canada.
Those with connections to Australia can review ethics training in Australia.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Optometrist and dispensing optician-specific — completed early, presented with reflective notes, these are the courses GOC case examiners actually want to see.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →CPD that is directly relevant to the specific GOC Standard at issue, completed early in the investigation period, and presented with a brief reflective note explaining what was learned and how practice has changed. Generic CPD in unrelated areas carries very little weight.
There is no fixed minimum. Two to three targeted courses for straightforward cases, four to six for more serious matters. Quality and relevance matter more than quantity. Courses completed early and presented with reflective notes carry more weight than the same courses completed at the last minute.
Yes — CPD certified by a recognised body, such as the CPD Certification Service, carries more weight than uncertified courses. The certification independently validates the quality of the learning, which matters when certificates are presented to GOC case examiners.
Yes — significantly. CPD completed in the first weeks after the GOC concern arose carries far more weight than CPD completed just before a hearing. Early CPD signals genuine engagement. Late CPD signals strategic compliance.
A brief written note — two or three short paragraphs — explaining what you learned from a specific CPD course and how it relates to the GOC concern and has changed your practice. It transforms a bare certificate into genuine evidence of professional development.
CPD specifically addressing informed consent in optical practice — the legal basis for consent, how it should be documented, and what the GOC Standards require. Professional ethics and professionalism CPD provides important supplementary context.
CPD specifically addressing clinical record keeping standards in optical practice — what records must contain, how they should be structured, and the documentation requirements under the GOC Standards of Practice.
Yes — professional ethics CPD provides the foundational values context that underpins the GOC Standards. However, it should complement, not replace, CPD that specifically addresses the optical practice standard most directly relevant to the concern.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. For an optical professional building a comprehensive GOC remediation file, completing 10 relevant courses progressively over the investigation period provides one of the most compelling CPD evidence bases a GOC case can present.
Yes. Regardless of whether you believe the complaint is justified, completing relevant CPD demonstrates professional engagement and good character — both of which the GOC assesses. It also strengthens your overall position if the case does proceed.
Yes — if the CPD is relevant to the concern, it can form part of the evidence file even if it was completed before the complaint. However, CPD completed after the concern arose and specifically in response to it carries more direct evidential weight.
Not in general — the choice of CPD is the registrant's, guided by the specific concern raised and the GOC Standards most directly relevant to it. Where conditions of practice include specific CPD requirements, those must be met in addition to any other CPD undertaken.
Chronologically — from earliest to most recent — with each certificate accompanied by a brief reflective note. An index or contents page helps the case examiners navigate the file. Present within a complete remediation file alongside the reflective statement and any supervisor reports.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GOC regulatory proceedings.