More than 8,500 doctors face having their licence to practise removed
by the GMC for failing to respond to communications regarding
revalidation, official figures show. The regulator told Pulse that
23,789 doctors have not responded to communications regarding
revalidation or not confirmed their designated body as of 1 August.
Of
these, 8,543 doctors face having their licence to practise removed
after they were targeted multiple times in the ‘Make Your Connection’
campaign launched by the GMC in April 2012, and did not respond. Of
these, 4,179 doctors have registered addresses in the UK. The GMC
said it would be writing to these doctors next month to give them a
deadline to respond before action is taken to remove their licence to
practise.
In addition, 15,246 doctors have not confirmed their
connection with a designated body, with 10,882 of these doctors
registered with a UK address. The GMC said it will make further attempts
to contact these doctors about revalidation as some may be recent
registrants and others may be seeking employment and do not have a
suitable employer yet.
A GMC spokesperson warned doctors who do
not respond risk losing their licence to practise. She said: ‘We wrote
to all doctors in January this year to confirm the date of their first
revalidation and to ask those that hadn’t already done so to confirm
their designated body.
‘Later this year we will write out again to
the doctors from the “Make Your Connection” campaign who have not yet
responded to us.
‘If they fail to respond to our request for
information about their designated body, either to confirm their
designated body or to tell us that currently they do not have a
designated body, they will be putting their licence to practise at
risk.’
More on this story here.
3 comments:
Recommended read
Jeff
Paves the way for privatisation. Is it a protest though?
Irene.
Some years ago I worked in a Government Dept where one member of staff was employed full time trying to trace Drs who had worked in Local Hospitals for a very short period -sometimes only a week.
The hospitals could never supply any details about these people -suggesting they had never provided any personal information and therefore their credentials had never been verified. I hope matters have improved since then but I don' know that they have.
Kath
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