Showing 616 to 630 of 1608 results
Our profession’s medicines and prescribing rights
Find out what rights your profession has and how these are changed
Case studies
These case studies will help explain how you might assess risk, manage your fitness to practise and ensure you continue to meet your HCPC standards.
Professions and protected titles
The professions we regulate have one or more designated titles that are protected by law and professionals must be registered to use them
Case studies
Case studies that promote and protect the interests of service users and carers
A registrant's story - Finding the why in CPD (Andrew Ormerod)
Andrew Ormerod, a registered paradedic and founder of CPDme, shares his journey to realising the importance of CPD and insight into finding its true purpose.
AHP Support and Supervision: The Scotland Story
Gail Nash, NHS Education for Scotland's AHP Practice Education Programme Lead, tells the story of how NHS Scotland developed models and strategies that enable AHPs to participate in meaningful supervision practice.
Registration: what you need to know as an employer
Info on joining the Register, renewals, international applicants, period of adaptation and returning to practice
Service User Expert Advisor
Service User Expert Advisors will be engaged in an effective and targeted manner, which is reflective of the skills, expertise and experience successful candidates bring to the role
Professional bodies for occupational therapists
Professional bodies typically promote the profession, represent their members and provide curriculum frameworks, training and CPD.
New legislation expands the number of professions able to issue fit notes
The UK government has introduced new legislation to allow a wider range of healthcare professionals to certify fit notes.
My COVID-19 story - Christana Akinremi
Christana Akinremi is a HCPC registered occupational therapist who has worked within NHS community services in southeast London.
Consultation on HCPC registration fees
We are consulting on proposals to increase our registration fees. If adopted, the changes would be effective from 1 October 2019 and existing registrants would pay the new renewal fee when their profession next renews its registration.