The General Medical Council has launched a consultation on updated guidance to help doctors balance their personal beliefs with patient care and professional standards.
The General Medical Council is overhauling its guidance on how doctors must manage their personal beliefs and values when treating patients, launching a public consultation that will run until 11 June. The move marks the first comprehensive update to the Personal beliefs and medical practice guidance since 2013.
The GMC said it is updating the rules to reflect significant legal, social, and cultural changes in healthcare over the past decade. Examples cited include the government’s recently published guidance on defining anti-Muslim hostility and ongoing parliamentary debates over assisted dying legislation. The regulator emphasised its intention to allow doctors to practise in line with their own beliefs and values whilst ensuring patients’ rights are protected and good, safe care is maintained.
What the updated guidance will coverThe proposed changes aim to make the guidance consistent with current law and reflect developments in healthcare practice. Key improvements include restructuring the guidance to make it easier to navigate, updating the tone to acknowledge the diversity of belief systems in modern society, and ensuring the core principles apply across a wide range of healthcare settings including general practice, hospital medicine, and community health services.
The consultation invites views from healthcare organisations, patients, healthcare professionals, and the public. The GMC encouraged everyone with an interest in medical practice to participate and help shape the updated standards.
A timely update for modern healthcareThe need for updated guidance comes against a backdrop of high-profile cases highlighting tensions between doctor conscience and patient rights. In 2023, Kent GP Richard Scott was given a formal warning by a medical practitioners tribunal after telling a vulnerable young patient seeking mental health treatment that he needed to address his beliefs. The case underscored the complex balance regulators must strike between protecting doctor autonomy and ensuring patient safety and dignity.
The 2013 guidance acknowledged that doctors could decline to provide certain treatments based on conscience objections, but it also made clear that doctors must not impose their personal views or beliefs on patients. The updated version will need to maintain this balance whilst clarifying expectations in areas where medical practice, law, and social attitudes have shifted considerably.
Why this matters for patient careEffective guidance on this issue is crucial for maintaining trust in the medical profession. Patients need confidence that their doctor will treat them fairly regardless of the doctor’s personal beliefs, whilst doctors need clear professional standards to guide their practice. The healthcare environment has evolved dramatically since 2013, with increased diversity in the workforce and patient populations, changing attitudes towards issues such as gender identity and sexuality, and evolving legal frameworks governing medical practice.
The GMC’s decision to update the guidance reflects recognition that the 2013 version no longer adequately addresses contemporary healthcare challenges. By consulting widely, the regulator aims to develop principles that respect both professional conscience and patient welfare in an increasingly complex healthcare landscape.
Kent residents’ perspectiveFor patients across Kent and Medway, clearer guidance from the GMC should help ensure consistency in how doctors approach their professional obligations. Residents accessing services through NHS Kent and Medway ICB, local hospital trusts including Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust and East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust, or GP practices can expect their healthcare providers to have clear standards guiding how personal beliefs are managed in clinical practice.
The consultation provides an opportunity for patients, healthcare workers, and organisations across Kent to shape this important guidance. Local healthcare providers and patient groups may wish to submit responses to the GMC consultation, which is available on the GMC’s website.
The healthcare profession has a responsibility to maintain public confidence through clear, fair, and enforceable standards. By updating its guidance on personal beliefs and medical practice, the GMC is attempting to ensure that doctors across England can provide excellent care whilst working within a framework that protects both professional conscience and patient rights. The consultation process offers a chance for all stakeholders to contribute to standards that will affect how doctors practise for years to come.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- The GMC is updating its 2013 guidance on personal beliefs and medical practice to reflect legal, social, and cultural changes in healthcare
- The consultation runs until 11 June and invites responses from healthcare professionals, organisations, patients, and the public
- The updated guidance aims to help doctors balance their personal beliefs with their duty to treat all patients fairly and provide safe care
What This Means for Kent Residents
For patients in Kent and Medway, updated GMC guidance should provide clarity on how doctors will manage conscience objections and personal beliefs in clinical settings. This is particularly relevant for those accessing services through NHS Kent and Medway ICB and local hospital trusts. If you wish to contribute to this consultation or have concerns about how your doctor has handled personal beliefs or values in your care, you can raise issues through your GP practice, the relevant NHS trust, or by contacting the GMC directly. Clear professional standards help ensure everyone receives fair, respectful treatment regardless of their own or their doctor’s personal beliefs.



