A complete guide to the GOsC Standard of Proficiency and professional standards — what each area requires in osteopathic practice, how standards are assessed in fitness to practise proceedings, and how to demonstrate ongoing compliance
Every practising osteopath must meet the GOsC Standard of Proficiency. This document — and the GOsC's supporting guidance — sets the benchmark against which all GOsC fitness to practise assessments are made. Understanding the standards in depth protects both patients and osteopathic registrations.
The GOsC Standard of Proficiency for Osteopaths sets out the knowledge, skills, and professional characteristics all osteopaths must have to be registered and fit to practise.
It is the primary regulatory document against which all GOsC fitness to practise assessments are conducted — every concern in proceedings is framed as a failure to meet one or more elements of this standard.
The Standard covers: the theoretical and clinical knowledge base required for safe osteopathic practice; patient assessment and clinical reasoning skills; the ability to develop and implement appropriate treatment plans; communication with patients and other healthcare professionals; obtaining valid consent;
maintaining appropriate clinical records; professional behaviour and conduct; and the commitment to continuing professional development.
The guide to GOsC fitness to practise proceedings explains how the Standard is applied at each stage of the regulatory process.
The GOsC Standard requires osteopaths to take a thorough history, conduct a comprehensive physical examination, formulate an accurate clinical assessment, and identify any red flags or contraindications to treatment.
Clinical reasoning — the ability to integrate clinical findings and reach sound conclusions about diagnosis and management — is a core element of the Standard.
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Where a clinical adverse event occurs, the assessment standard is whether the history and examination were thorough enough to identify relevant contraindications,
whether the clinical reasoning leading to the treatment decision was sound, and whether the treatment actually provided met the standard of a reasonably competent osteopath in the same circumstances.
The GOsC Standard requires valid informed consent before any treatment — and specifically before any high-risk technique such as HVT. The consent discussion must cover the proposed treatment, the material risks, available alternatives, and what would happen without treatment. The consent process must be documented.
For HVT specifically, the GOsC's guidance requires explicit discussion of the specific risks — including the risk of serious adverse events such as vascular complications — before performing the technique. A consent discussion that did not specifically address HVT risks,
or that was not documented, creates a significant vulnerability in any subsequent fitness to practise case. The guide to informed consent in healthcare covers the full legal and professional framework.
The GOsC Standard requires contemporaneous, accurate, legible clinical records sufficient for a colleague to continue treatment safely. Records must document the history, examination findings, assessment, treatment plan, treatment delivered, patient response, consent discussion, and
any referral decisions. Poor records are both a fitness to practise concern in their own right and an evidential problem — where records are inadequate, it becomes difficult or impossible to demonstrate that the clinical care provided met the required standard.
The guide to clinical record keeping standards provides the professional framework that applies across all healthcare professions including osteopathy.
The GOsC Standard requires all registered osteopaths to engage in ongoing CPD to maintain and develop professional knowledge and skills.
The GOsC's CPD requirements specify the minimum annual CPD that must be completed and require that CPD is relevant to the osteopath's scope of practice. Failure to meet CPD requirements is itself a fitness to practise concern.
CPD completed in response to a specific GOsC fitness to practise concern — targeting the element of the Standard most directly relevant to the allegation — provides both CPD compliance and compelling remediation evidence for the proceedings.
The guide to what GOsC CPD evidence counts explains how this evidence is assessed.
The guide to GOsC remediation evidence covers how to build a complete evidence file demonstrating compliance with the Standard of Proficiency.
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 ethics and professionalism CPD — demonstrating active engagement with the GOsC Standard of Proficiency in both routine practice and fitness to practise proceedings.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →The primary regulatory document setting out the knowledge, skills, and professional characteristics all osteopaths must have to be fit to practise. All GOsC fitness to practise assessments are conducted against this standard.
A thorough history, comprehensive physical examination, sound clinical reasoning, identification of contraindications, and an accurate clinical assessment — sufficient to support safe and appropriate treatment decisions.
Valid informed consent — including specific discussion of material risks — before any treatment, and specifically before HVT or other higher-risk techniques. Consent process must be documented.
Explicit discussion of the specific risks of HVT — including serious adverse event risks — before performing the technique, with documentation of the consent discussion.
Contemporaneous, accurate, legible records sufficient for a colleague to continue care — documenting history, examination, assessment, treatment plan, treatment delivered, patient response, consent, and referrals.
Ongoing CPD relevant to scope of practice meeting minimum annual requirements. Failure to meet CPD requirements is itself a fitness to practise concern.
Every concern is framed as a failure to meet one or more specific elements of the Standard. Case examiners assess whether conduct met the standard expected of a reasonably competent osteopath in the same circumstances.
Yes — CPD specifically addressing the GOsC Standard element at issue, with reflective notes connecting the learning to the specific standard, carries significant weight as evidence of active professional engagement.
Maintaining appropriate professional boundaries; being honest with patients, colleagues, and the GOsC; behaving with integrity in all professional contexts; and raising concerns about unsafe practice.
Recognising the limits of osteopathic competence and making appropriate referrals to other healthcare professionals where the patient's condition requires it — including urgent referral for red flag presentations.
Osteopaths must recognise adverse events, manage them appropriately, refer for further care where needed, document the event and management, and comply with the duty of candour by disclosing what happened to the patient.
An obligation to be open and honest with patients when something goes wrong — disclosing that an adverse event occurred, apologising, explaining what happened, and explaining what will be done in response.
The GOsC requires CPD relevant to the osteopath's scope of practice. CPD that directly addresses specific elements of the Standard of Proficiency — particularly in the area of any fitness to practise concern — is the most relevant and carries most weight.
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.