How mental health conditions interact with HCPC fitness to practise proceedings, what support is available, and what evidence health and care professionals need when mental health and regulatory concerns arise together.
Mental health conditions and HCPC fitness to practise proceedings can interact in complex and serious ways. This guide explains what health and care professionals with mental health conditions need to know.
Mental health conditions arise in HCPC proceedings in two distinct ways. First, a registrant's mental health condition may itself be the concern, the HCPC has a Health Committee specifically for cases where health, including mental health, is the primary fitness to practise issue.
Second, a mental health condition may arise as context in proceedings triggered by clinical or conduct concerns, where the condition is relevant to understanding why those concerns arose. The guide to HCPC sanctions covers the full range of outcomes available in proceedings.
The HCPC has a dedicated Health Committee for cases where a registrant's fitness to practise is affected by a health condition, including mental health. The Health Committee's approach focuses on whether appropriate treatment and monitoring is in place and whether the risk to service users can be managed.
Where a health condition is affecting practice, the most important evidence: engagement with GP, psychiatrist, or occupational health; documented treatment progress; and where appropriate, a voluntary interim arrangement while treatment is ongoing.
The guide to HCPC insight and remediation evidence covers how health-related cases are assessed.
Where HCPC proceedings have been triggered by clinical or conduct concerns and a mental health condition was relevant, the mental health context can be presented as mitigation. Effective mitigation requires medical evidence specifically addressing the impact of the condition at the time of the concern; occupational
health assessment; evidence of current treatment engagement and progress; and a reflective account honestly acknowledging the connection between the condition and the concern that arose.
The guide to HCPC CPD evidence covers how professional development during a difficult period contributes to the evidence file.
CPD Certified, Online, Immediate Access

Professional bodies, CSP for physiotherapists, RCOT for occupational therapists, RCSLT for speech therapists, BDA for dietitians, all provide mental health support to members. NHS occupational health, the Practitioner Health Programme, and private counselling are all appropriate.
Research consistently shows that HCPC investigations cause significant psychological harm. Seeking appropriate support is the professionally appropriate response and, where documented, provides evidence of responsible self-management that supports the overall case.
The guide to demonstrating remediation covers the complete evidence framework.
UK-registered HCPC professionals can access ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Canada can consult professional development in Canada.
Those with connections to Ireland can review ethics training in Ireland.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. HCPC-specific ethics and professionalism CPD demonstrates ongoing professional engagement and genuine professional values.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Through the dedicated HCPC Health Committee, focused on whether appropriate treatment and monitoring is in place and whether the risk to service users can be managed.
A dedicated HCPC committee for cases where a registrant's fitness to practise is affected by a health condition, including mental health.
Engagement with GP, psychiatrist, or occupational health; documented treatment progress; and where appropriate, a voluntary interim arrangement while treatment is ongoing.
Yes, where it is evidenced, specific, and accompanied by treatment engagement demonstrating the risk has genuinely reduced.
Professional body support (CSP, RCOT, RCSLT, BDA), NHS occupational health, the Practitioner Health Programme, and private counselling.
Research consistently shows that HCPC investigations cause significant psychological harm — anxiety, professional identity disruption, and depression are common responses.
Where the condition is relevant to the concern under investigation, disclosure with supporting evidence is generally appropriate. Take trade union or professional body advice before disclosing.
HCPC registrants must recognise when their own health may be affecting their ability to practise safely and take appropriate action.
Yes. CPD completed during the period demonstrates ongoing professional engagement and genuine commitment to professional values.
A confidential service providing support to healthcare professionals experiencing mental or physical health problems, including HCPC registrants.
Burnout is a recognised occupational health risk. Where burnout has contributed to a clinical concern, it can be presented as mitigation with appropriate supporting evidence.
An independent professional assessment of the impact of a health condition on practice and the steps needed to manage the risk.
Not automatically. Where the condition is managed appropriately and practice remains safe, mental health history does not prevent continued registration.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent advice from a specialist regulatory solicitor.