A step-by-step guide for chiropractors who have just received a GCC fitness to practise letter — the immediate steps that protect your registration, what not to do, and how to start building your evidence from day one
A GCC fitness to practise letter can feel like the ground has disappeared from under you. This guide explains exactly what to do, in what order, and why the next few days matter more than many chiropractors realise.
When a GCC fitness to practise letter arrives, the instinct is often to want to respond immediately, to explain, to justify, to correct whatever misunderstanding has occurred. Resist that instinct. The factual response you eventually submit to the GCC is one of the most important documents in your case, and
it needs to be prepared carefully, with professional support, after reviewing all the relevant records. Responding in haste, under stress, alone, is one of the most consistently damaging things a chiropractor can do at this stage.
The GCC letter will identify the concern raised and give you a deadline to respond. That deadline is real and must be met. But you have time, days or weeks, not hours, to prepare a considered, well-supported response.
Use that time well. The guide to GCC fitness to practise proceedings explains the full process so you understand what you are facing.
The British Chiropractic Association provides regulatory support to members facing GCC fitness to practise investigations. This includes access to specialist legal advice and, where required, representation at any GCC hearing.
Contact the BCA today, before you respond to the GCC, before you speak to colleagues about the specific concern, before you do anything else related to the investigation. If you are not a BCA member, contact a specialist regulatory solicitor who handles GCC proceedings. Do not attempt to navigate GCC proceedings without specialist support.
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The GCC letter will identify the patient or incident at the centre of the concern. Gather all relevant clinical records, assessment notes, treatment records, consent documentation, any communications with the patient. Do not alter, add to, or delete from any records.
Do not create retrospective notes. Simply secure everything relevant and hand it to your legal representative. Record keeping is scrutinised very carefully in GCC proceedings, and
the guide to GCC record keeping standards explains exactly what documentation standards the GCC applies.
Start CPD from today. This is one of the most practically important things you can do in parallel with getting professional support. GCC case examiners assess CPD evidence, and the date of completion is visible.
CPD completed consistently from the first days of any GCC concern carries significantly more evidential weight than the same courses completed in the weeks before a hearing.
The guide to what GCC CPD evidence counts explains which courses are most relevant to the most common categories of GCC concern.
A GCC fitness to practise letter is not a finding of wrongdoing. It is the beginning of an investigation, not the end of one. Many GCC concerns are resolved at case examiner stage without a formal sanction, particularly where strong remediation evidence is submitted.
Understanding the range of possible outcomes, from no further action through to agreed outcomes, conditions, suspension, or erasure, helps you understand what you are working toward.
The guide to GCC case examiners explains what they assess. The guide to GCC sanctions explains what each outcome means for a chiropractic career.
The guide to GCC insight and remediation explains what case examiners need to see to resolve your case at the earliest possible stage.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Chiropractic-specific ethics and professional standards CPD completed from the day you receive a GCC letter is the evidence that most consistently changes case outcomes.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Contact the BCA today, before responding to anything. If you are not a BCA member, contact a specialist regulatory solicitor immediately.
You should not respond without professional support. The factual response is one of the most important documents in your case.
No. It is the beginning of an investigation. Many concerns are resolved without a formal sanction.
Yes, unless an interim order is imposed. Continue practising to the highest professional standards throughout.
GCC case examiners assess CPD by date. CPD from day one signals genuine engagement. CPD compiled before a hearing signals compliance only.
Absolutely not. Altering records after a complaint is treated as fundamental dishonesty in GCC proceedings.
All records relating to the patient or incident identified in the letter — assessment notes, treatment records, consent documentation, and any communications with the patient.
The stage at which GCC case examiners review the complete evidence file and decide to close the case, issue a warning, propose an agreed outcome, or refer to a full PCC hearing.
Variable, from several months to over a year for complex matters.
CPD completed from day one with specific reflective notes, combined with a genuine reflective statement demonstrating specific insight into the concern raised.
Regulatory support, access to specialist legal advice, and representation at GCC hearings to member chiropractors.
No further action, a formal warning, conditions of practice, suspension, or erasure from the chiropractic register.
Case examiners assess the seriousness of the concern and the strength of the remediation evidence submitted. Strong early evidence significantly increases the chance of resolution before a hearing.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek advice from a specialist regulatory solicitor or your professional defence organisation.