What NMC case examiners do, how they assess a case file, what outcomes they can reach, how to make the strongest possible case at this stage, and what happens next
The NMC case examiner stage is one of the most important decision points in any fitness to practise case. It is here that many cases close — through no case to answer decisions or agreed outcomes — without ever reaching a full panel hearing. Understanding what case examiners do and how to present the strongest possible case at this stage is essential for any nurse or midwife under investigation.
NMC case examiners are senior NMC staff who review fitness to practise case files once the investigation stage is complete. There are two case examiners assigned to each case — one lay and one registrant (a nurse or midwife). Together, they assess the complete evidence file and decide how the case should proceed.
Case examiners are not tribunal members. They do not make final findings of fact or impairment — those decisions belong to the fitness to practise panel hearing.
The case examiners' role is to assess whether the evidence, as gathered, is sufficient to justify proceeding to a panel hearing — or whether the case can be resolved at this stage through a less formal outcome.
The NMC case examiner stage is broadly equivalent to the GMC case examiner stage — and like the GMC, the NMC makes significant use of case examiner level disposals to resolve cases that do not require the full weight of a panel hearing.
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At the case examiner stage, the two case examiners review the complete case file — the NMC's evidence, the nurse's response, all clinical records and witness accounts gathered during investigation, and any expert reports. They assess whether the concerns, as evidenced, raise a real question about the nurse's current fitness to practise.
The case examiners assess the evidence on the balance of probabilities — the civil standard of proof, not the criminal standard. They consider the factual evidence, the nurse's response and the quality of insight it demonstrates, the remediation undertaken, and
the risk of repetition. All of these factors influence whether the case proceeds to panel or can be resolved at case examiner level.
The quality of the remediation evidence presented at this stage matters significantly. Case examiners who see a compelling CPD portfolio, a genuine reflective account, and specific practice changes are better placed to reach a resolved outcome than those reviewing a bare factual response with no remediation evidence attached.
The guide to demonstrating remediation to your regulator is directly relevant to building the evidence for this stage.
NMC case examiners can reach four main outcomes:
The case examiner stage is when the remediation evidence built during the investigation period is most consequential. Case examiners assess the overall picture —
the factual evidence, the nurse's response, the quality of insight demonstrated, and the remediation undertaken — to determine whether the public interest is best served by a panel hearing or a resolved outcome.
Practical steps to strengthen the case at this stage:
Whether to accept an agreed outcome is one of the most important decisions in any NMC fitness to practise case. The decision depends on the specific terms of the proposed outcome, the strength of the evidence against the nurse, the realistic range of outcomes if the case proceeds to panel, and legal advice on the relative merits.
An agreed outcome at case examiner level avoids the uncertainty, stress, and cost of a full panel hearing. But an agreed outcome requires the nurse to accept the factual basis of the allegation —
which may not be appropriate where facts are genuinely disputed. And the terms of the agreed outcome — including any warning or conditions — have real professional consequences that must be understood before acceptance.
This decision should never be made without legal advice. The guide to agreed outcomes —
should you accept or go to tribunal covers the considerations that apply, and while it addresses the GMC context, the framework is directly applicable to NMC agreed outcome decisions.
UK-registered nurses and midwives can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to New Zealand can consult professional development in New Zealand.
Those with connections to Ireland can review ethics training in Ireland.
Nurses should also understand the full range of NMC outcomes — including NMC suspension and what happens when a nurse is struck off the register.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Completed early and submitted before the case examiner review, CPD evidence can make the difference between a resolved outcome and a panel referral.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Senior NMC staff — one lay, one registrant — who review fitness to practise case files once investigation is complete. They assess the evidence and decide whether the case proceeds to a panel hearing or can be resolved at case examiner level through a less formal outcome.
No case to answer (case closes); a formal warning (recorded on register for five years); an agreed outcome (a warning or conditions accepted by both parties); or referral to a fitness to practise panel hearing. Case examiners cannot make final impairment findings — those belong to the panel.
No — the case examiner review is not a public process. Only panel hearings are public. A case that closes at case examiner stage — through no case to answer or agreed outcome — does not result in a public record of the proceedings (though a warning is publicly recorded on the register).
Variable — typically several months after the investigation stage is complete. The NMC does not publish specific target timeframes for the case examiner review. During this period, any additional remediation evidence can still be submitted to strengthen the case.
The civil standard — the balance of probabilities. The evidence is assessed on whether it is more likely than not that the alleged conduct occurred. This is a lower standard than the criminal standard (beyond reasonable doubt).
No. An agreed outcome requires the nurse's acceptance of both the factual basis and the proposed disposal. If you do not agree to the proposed terms, the case proceeds to a panel hearing where the facts will be determined. The decision whether to accept should always be made with legal advice.
All available remediation evidence — CPD certificates with reflective notes, supervisor or senior colleague references, reflective statements, audit evidence, and a personal development plan. All evidence should be in the file before the case examiners begin their review.
Yes — through a no case to answer decision or an agreed outcome. Many NMC cases are resolved at this stage without ever reaching a panel hearing. The quality of the remediation evidence and the strength of the factual response are key factors in whether a resolved outcome is achievable.
A decision that the evidence is insufficient to establish that the nurse's fitness to practise may be impaired. The case closes. There is no public record of the outcome. The nurse's registration is unaffected. It is not a formal finding of innocence but a determination that the evidence does not meet the threshold for further action.
A full fitness to practise panel hearing is convened. The panel — consisting of a chair, a lay member, and a registrant member — hears evidence, makes findings of fact, determines whether fitness to practise is impaired, and if so, imposes a sanction. Panel hearings are public and the outcome is recorded on the register.
A nurse or midwife appointed as a case examiner by the NMC. Each case has one registrant case examiner and one lay (non-registrant) case examiner. The registrant case examiner brings professional expertise in nursing or midwifery practice to the assessment of the evidence.
Yes — and you should. Additional CPD certificates, supervisor reports, and other remediation evidence completed during the investigation period should be submitted to the NMC as they become available. Do not wait for the case examiner review to submit remediation evidence.
Case examiners assess current fitness to practise — not just what happened at the time of the alleged conduct. A nurse who has genuinely addressed the concerns, demonstrated insight, and undertaken meaningful remediation may have current fitness to practise even where past conduct fell below the standard.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in NMC regulatory proceedings.