The Professional Standards Authority (PSA) has published its report on the GDC’s performance for 2022/23, concluding that it met 16 of the 18 Standards of Good Regulation.
There was positive recognition for the GDC’s engagement with stakeholders and response to the backlog of applications from overseas dental professionals. The GDC tripled the number of places for Part 1 of the Overseas Registration Exam this year and has increased the number of Part 2 sittings from three to four in 2024.
The PSA found that Standards 11 and 15 were not met, specifically the parts of those standards relating to the respective timely resolution of registration and fitness to practise cases.
The changes to legislation to register dental professionals who qualify overseas prompted a surge of applications. The GDC recruited a large team of additional people and external associates to process and assess applications, and the backlog is now starting to reduce.
The PSA noted that registration applications for UK-qualified dental professionals showed recent improvement. As an indication of the increased workload, the GDC is on course to register more new dental professionals this year than ever before, with 117,983 professionals on the register (as of September 30, 2023).
There has been a long-term issue that GDC fitness to practise cases often take too long to resolve. The GDC has increased the size of the casework team, streamlined processes, improved guidance to reduce delays and, with support from stakeholders, is undertaking a pilot to enable single clinical issues to be resolved more quickly while continuing to effectively maintain public safety and confidence in the dental profession.
These reforms reflect the GDC’s determination to improve the fitness to practise process where it can, ahead of any potential regulatory reform. It is also hoped that improved timeliness and proportionality will reduce the impact of fitness-to-practice investigations on the health and well-being of those involved.
Gurvinder Soomal, interim chief executive officer and registrar, said, “We are making very real improvements to the fitness to practise process. It is disappointing that the effects are not yet visible in the performance data, although this is an inevitable consequence of managing down a backlog of old cases with the measure of timeliness only crystallising at the point of completion. For registration, UK applications are now being processed within the target time and the backlog of international applications is falling steadily as a result of increasing processing capacity.”