last updated:29/11/2017 @ 10:14 am

Good Occupational Medical Practice 2017

To emphasise that occupational physicians share many obligations in common with other doctors, the original words and passages of Good Medical Practice (displayed in black), and selected abstracts from supplementary guidelines of the GMC (displayed in red), are retained and presented. Where appropriate, extra commentary, written specifically by the Faculty of Occupational Medicine, then follows in a distinguishing (blue) typeface.
ForewordIntroductionDomain 1: Knowledge, skills and performanceDomain 2: Safety and qualityDomain 3: Communication, partnership and teamworkDomain 4: Maintaining trustAfterword

Record your work clearly, accurately and legibly

Record your work clearly, accurately and legibly

  1. Documents you make (including clinical records) to formally record your work must be clear, accurate and legible. You should make records at the same time as the events you are recording or as soon as possible afterwards.
  2. You must keep records that contain personal information about patients, colleagues or others securely, and in line with any data protection requirements.10.
  3. Clinical records should include:
  1. relevant clinical findings
  2. the decisions made and actions agreed, and who is making the decisions and agreeing the actions
  3. the information given to patients
  4. any drugs prescribed or other investigation or treatment
  5. who is making the record and when.