What GPhC case examiners do, how they assess the pharmacy case file, outcomes available, and how pharmacists can make the strongest possible case at this stage
The GPhC case examiner stage is the critical first formal decision point in every pharmacy fitness to practise case. It is where many cases close without proceeding to a full committee hearing — and where the remediation evidence built during the investigation period has its most immediate impact on the outcome.
GPhC case examiners are senior. Most cases begin with a GPhC investigation. GPhC staff assigned to review fitness to practise case files once the investigation stage is complete. Like other healthcare regulators, the GPhC uses pairs of case examiners —
one lay and one pharmacy registrant — to review the complete evidence and decide whether a case should proceed to a Fitness to Practise Committee hearing or can be resolved at this earlier stage.
Case examiners assess the case file — the GPhC's evidence, the pharmacist's response, clinical records, witness accounts, and any expert reports — against the GPhC's Standards for Pharmacy Professionals. They determine whether the concerns, as evidenced, justify a full committee hearing or can be addressed through a warning or agreed outcome.
The GPhC's Standards for Pharmacy Professionals — nine standards covering patient safety, working with others, acting professionally, and leadership — provide the benchmark against which all pharmacy practice is assessed. Case examiners assess whether the alleged conduct fell below one or more of these standards and, if so, how seriously.
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

Key assessment factors include: the nature and seriousness of the concern, whether it was an isolated incident or a pattern, the pharmacist's insight as demonstrated in their response, the remediation undertaken, and the risk of repetition. Strong remediation evidence —
CPD certificates with reflective notes, supervisor reports, practice audit data — can be the difference between a resolved outcome and referral to committee. The guide to demonstrating remediation to your regulator sets out the full framework.
Submit all remediation evidence before the case examiner review begins. For pharmacists, particularly relevant evidence includes: CPD addressing the specific concern (dispensing safety, controlled drug procedures, patient confidentiality, as relevant); supervisor or responsible pharmacist reports confirming current
practice meets GPhC standards; and significant event analyses or audit evidence from the pharmacy setting.
Pharmacy-specific CPD — addressing the GPhC Standards for Pharmacy Professionals and the specific area of concern — carries more weight than generic healthcare ethics CPD.
The guide to demonstrating insight to your regulator explains how to present CPD evidence most effectively.
This is one of the most significant decisions in any GPhC fitness to practise case. Accepting an agreed outcome requires accepting the factual basis of the allegation — and the outcome is publicly recorded.
The advantages include certainty, speed, and avoiding a public committee hearing. The main reason not to accept is where you genuinely dispute the factual basis or where the proposed terms are disproportionate.
This decision should never be made without specialist legal advice. The considerations that apply — the strength of the evidence, the realistic range of committee outcomes, the professional consequences of acceptance — require careful assessment in the specific circumstances of each case.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Australia can consult ethics training in Australia.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review professional development in New Zealand.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Pharmacy-specific CPD submitted before the case examiner review demonstrates genuine engagement with GPhC Standards and can support a resolved outcome.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Senior GPhC staff — one lay, one pharmacy registrant — who review fitness to practise case files once investigation is complete. They decide whether the case proceeds to the Fitness to Practise Committee or can be resolved through a warning or agreed outcome.
No case to answer; a formal warning (publicly recorded); an agreed outcome; or referral to the GPhC Fitness to Practise Committee for a formal hearing.
The GPhC's nine professional standards covering person-centred care, patient safety, working with others, communication, medicine management, leadership, and CPD. Case examiners assess whether the alleged conduct fell below one or more of these standards.
No. Only Fitness to Practise Committee hearings are public. A case resolved at case examiner level — through no case to answer or agreed outcome — does not result in a public hearing record.
Pharmacy-specific CPD addressing the relevant GPhC Standard, responsible pharmacist or supervisor reports, significant event analyses, and audit evidence from the pharmacy setting. Evidence that directly addresses the specific concern carries most weight.
No. Acceptance is voluntary. If you do not agree, the case proceeds to a committee hearing. Always obtain specialist legal advice before deciding.
Strong, specific remediation evidence demonstrates genuine engagement with the concern and insight into what went wrong. This can result in a less serious agreed outcome being offered or support a no case to answer decision where the concern is less serious.
A formal public hearing at which a panel considers the evidence, makes findings of fact, determines whether fitness to practise is impaired, and if so, imposes the most appropriate sanction — from a warning through to removal from the pharmacy register.
Yes. GPhC registration applies to pharmacy technicians as well as pharmacists. The same fitness to practise process — including the case examiner stage — applies to all GPhC registrants.
Variable — typically several months after the investigation stage is complete. Additional remediation evidence can continue to be submitted during this period.
The civil standard — the balance of probabilities. This is lower than the criminal standard of proof.
Yes. The strategic decisions at this stage — what evidence to submit, whether to accept an agreed outcome, how to frame the factual response — require specialist legal advice.
Failure to cooperate with the GPhC's investigation is itself a fitness to practise concern under the GPhC Standards. It significantly worsens the pharmacist's position and may be treated as an aggravating factor in any sanction decision.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GPhC regulatory proceedings.