Kings View Launch Remediation Training
Kings View Chambers is excited to announce the launch of Insight Works Training – unique and practical courses focusing on impairment, reflection, insight, and remediation.
Kings View is widely considered to be the leading legal representatives for health and social care tribunals, rated excellent by its clients and with a proven track record of case success.
Building on its success as a leading professional discipline and regulatory law chambers, Kings View is excited to announce the launch of Insight Works Training, unique and practical courses focusing on impairment, reflection, insight, and remediation.
With over 30 years combined experience representing health and care registrants before all the major fitness to practise regulatory hearings and tribunals, we understand the direct correlation between cases where the registrant did not properly evidence reflection, insight, and remediation and those who received the more serious sanctions.
Insight Works Training has been developed specifically to address this. The courses are unique and practical focussing solely on taking health and care registrants through the process of impairment, reflection, insight and remediation, focussing on the area where nearly all professionals fall down – proving, evidencing, and demonstrating them.
Insight Works Training offers courses on:
- Impairment, reflection, insight, and remediation;
- Restoration for healthcare practitioners who are considering making an application for restoration back onto the register; and
- 1:1 mentoring programme specifically designed for those facing fitness to practise or restoration hearings.
The training will be delivered by both leading healthcare experts and legal experts in their field of defence, all with years of experience in mentoring and coaching.
More News & Articles
Sexual misconduct, remediation and fitness to practise: lessons from Sadiq v GMC
Sexual misconduct is hard to remediate, but insight and structured remediation can still influence sanctions.
The GMC’s new guidance on raising patient safety concerns: implications for doctors’ fitness to practise
The GMC’s new consultation reinforces doctors’ duty to raise patient safety concerns, with fitness to practise risks for failures and a need for early expert legal advice.
Assessing insight when a registrant denies allegations in fitness to practise proceedings
How fitness to practise panels can assess genuine insight when a registrant denies allegations and offers no apology, balancing fairness with public protection.
