What GCC record keeping standards require of chiropractors, how record keeping failures are assessed in fitness to practise proceedings, and how to maintain clinical records that protect both patients and registrations.
Record keeping failures are a significant category of GCC fitness to practise concern. Understanding what the GCC requires and how to document clinical care adequately protects both patients and registrations.
The GCC Code of Practice requires chiropractors to keep contemporaneous, accurate, and legible clinical records sufficient for a colleague to continue care safely. GCC-compliant records must document: the presenting complaint, history, and relevant background; clinical examination findings; assessment and diagnosis;
treatment plan and the rationale for it; consent, including specific discussion of HVT risks where applicable; treatment delivered at each attendance; the patient's response to treatment; any adverse events; referral decisions and the reasoning for them; and any communications with other healthcare providers.
The guide to GCC consent and HVT requirements covers the specific consent documentation requirements in detail.
In GCC proceedings involving a record keeping concern, the panel assesses whether clinical records met the standard expected of a reasonably competent chiropractor. A GCC-appointed independent expert reviews the records and provides an opinion on their adequacy. The most common record keeping failures in GCC
proceedings include: records too brief to demonstrate the clinical assessment and decision-making undertaken; records written retrospectively rather than contemporaneously; records that do not document the consent process; records that fail to document adverse events or changes in the patient's condition; and records
that contain inaccuracies or alterations.
Falsification of clinical records, specifically altering records after a complaint or adverse event, is treated as fundamental dishonesty and consistently leads to the most serious GCC outcomes.
The guide to GCC professional conduct covers the conduct standards that apply to record keeping.
The single most protective record keeping habit is contemporaneous documentation: records written at the time of the consultation, before the patient leaves the practice. Records written hours or days later are less reliable and more vulnerable to challenge in GCC proceedings.
Each consultation record should stand alone: a colleague reading the record without previous knowledge of the patient should be able to understand what was found, what was done, and why. For HVT specifically, each session record should document the specific techniques used, the spinal levels treated, the patient's response, and
any adverse symptoms reported. The guide to GCC remediation evidence covers how record keeping improvement is evidenced in fitness to practise proceedings.
CPD in clinical documentation and professional ethics provides direct remediation evidence for any record keeping concern. The guide to GCC insight and remediation covers how record keeping insight is demonstrated to the panel.
CPD Certified, Online, Immediate Access

UK-registered GCC professionals can access ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Ireland can consult ethics training in Ireland.
Those with connections to Canada can review professional development in Canada.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Chiropractic ethics, professionalism, and clinical standards CPD demonstrates active engagement with GCC record keeping requirements.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Presenting complaint and history; examination findings; assessment and diagnosis; treatment plan and rationale; consent; treatment at each attendance; patient response; adverse events; referral decisions; and communications with other providers.
Written at the time of the consultation, before the patient leaves the practice.
Through a GCC-appointed independent expert who reviews records and opines on whether they met the standard of a reasonably competent chiropractor.
Records too brief to demonstrate clinical assessment; retrospective rather than contemporaneous records; failure to document consent; failure to document adverse events; and inaccuracies or alterations.
Treated as fundamental dishonesty in GCC proceedings, consistently leading to the most serious outcomes.
The specific techniques used, spinal levels treated, patient response, and any adverse symptoms reported.
Yes. Persistent or serious record keeping failures that create patient safety risks can trigger fitness to practise proceedings.
CPD in clinical documentation, professional ethics, and probity, connecting learning specifically to the failure identified.
Yes. The Code requires documentation of the consent process, including specific HVT risks discussed.
Promptly, accurately, and completely, including what happened, patient symptoms, assessment and management, and any referral.
Significantly more weight than retrospective records in GCC proceedings.
Yes. Audit evidence of improved record keeping in current practice, combined with CPD, provides direct remediation evidence.
Altering, adding to, or deleting from clinical records after a complaint or adverse event. Treated as fundamental dishonesty.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent advice from a specialist regulatory solicitor.