The Nursing and Midwifery Council’s vetting failures span an alarming 12-year period, during which criminal records and character assessments were not consistently reviewed for nurses and midwives seeking registration or renewal. This extended timeline underscores the systemic nature of the regulatory breakdown rather than isolated incidents.
Data from the disclosure indicates that dozens of practitioners may now face removal from the register as a result of the investigation into these failures. The scope of the problem—affecting what appears to be numerous individual practitioners over more than a decade—demonstrates a fundamental breakdown in NMC’s quality assurance processes.
Comparatively, this vetting failure duration exceeds previously documented regulatory delays in other UK healthcare bodies, including 8-year delays at the General Medical Council and 5-year registration issues at the General Dental Council, suggesting healthcare regulation oversight requires urgent systematic reform.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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