GMC: Openness and honesty when things go wrong: The professional duty of candour: Summary

SJT Textbook: Openness and Honesty When Things Go Wrong (Duty of Candour)

Duty of Candour GMC Guidance

This duty of candour GMC guidance explains how doctors must be open, apologise promptly, report incidents, and support patients whenever harm or distress occurs.

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DIFFICULTY: ★★★☆☆ Moderate FREQUENCY: High PRIORITY: Must-Know
📍 EXAM MINDSET
When something goes wrong, I must be honest with the patient, apologise, report the incident, and act to prevent recurrence.

🎯 THE CORE PRINCIPLE

The professional duty of candour requires doctors to be open and honest with patients when treatment or care has caused harm or distress. This includes giving a timely, truthful explanation, offering a genuine apology, and providing appropriate support and remedy. Apologising is a professional duty and does not imply legal liability.

Candour also applies to openness with colleagues, employers, organisations, and regulators. Creating a learning culture through early reporting of incidents and near misses is essential to improving patient safety. Senior doctors and managers carry additional responsibility for fostering an environment where staff feel safe to speak up.

In MSRA SJT questions, high-scoring answers show early disclosure, sincere apology, clear explanation, reporting via formal systems, and learning-focused follow-up.

Duty of candour GMC applies to all doctors regardless of seniority.

⚡ HIGH-YIELD ACTIONS (What Scores Points)

1. Inform the patient promptly when harm or distress has occurred.
2. Give a clear, factual explanation of what is known at the time.
3. Offer a genuine apology without delay.
4. Explain the next steps, including investigations and support.
5. Report the incident using local governance systems.
6. Record the discussion and actions accurately in the notes.
7. Report relevant drug or device incidents to the appropriate authority.
8. Encourage a learning-focused response, not blame.
9. Be open with colleagues and seniors about what happened.
10. Follow up with the patient as more information becomes available.

MSRA SJT frequently tests breaches of duty of candour GMC principles.

🚨 RED FLAGS (Act Immediately)
• Deliberately withholding information from a harmed patient
• Blaming others to avoid responsibility
• Failing to apologise
• Altering or falsifying records
• Discouraging reporting of incidents
• Treating near misses as irrelevant
TRAP ANSWERS (Decoy Detectors)
Trap Answer Why It Tanks Your Score
“I should wait for legal advice before telling the patient” Delays breach the duty of candour.
“An apology is an admission of liability” Apologies are required and not an admission.
“It was only a near miss so no disclosure is needed” Near misses still require openness and reporting.
“It is best not to upset the patient with details” Withholding information is dishonest.

These traps prioritise self-protection and avoidance over honesty and patient trust.

Duty of candour GMC requires disclosure after both harm and near misses.

💬 MODEL PHRASES (Use These in SJT Logic)

Model Phrase
“I am very sorry that this has happened.”

* “I will explain what we know so far.”
* “We will investigate fully and keep you updated.”
* “I will report this incident through our safety systems.”
* “Your care and support are our priority.”

Apology is a core part of duty of candour GMC and is not legal liability.

🧠 MEMORY AID
OPEN CAR

O – Open immediately
P – Provide facts
E – Express apology
N – Next steps explained
C – Clinical support
A – Accurate documentation
R – Report and review

Failure to follow duty of candour GMC guidance undermines patient trust and safety.

🏃 EXAM SPEEDRUN
1 Recognise that harm or distress has occurred.
2 Inform the patient as soon as possible.
3 Apologise and explain honestly.
4 Provide immediate clinical and emotional support.
5 Report via incident systems.
6 Document clearly.
7 Follow up after investigation.

📋 QUICK FAQ

Must I apologise even if the outcome was unintended?
Yes. An apology is required whenever harm or distress has occurred. Does apologising mean I accept legal blame?
No. An apology is not an admission of liability. Should near misses be disclosed?
Yes. Near misses should be discussed and reported. Who has a duty of candour?
All healthcare professionals, and also health and care organisations under statutory duty. Should I wait for a complete investigation before speaking to the patient?
No. Initial disclosure must be prompt, with updates as more information emerges.

📚 GMC ANCHOR POINTS

• Being open and honest – Duty of Candour Guidance
• Apology and explanation – Good Medical Practice
• Reporting incidents – Patient Safety Guidance
• Learning culture – Leadership and Management Guidance
• Organisational candour – Statutory Duty of Candour Regulations

💡 MINI PRACTICE SCENARIO

A patient receives the wrong dose of medication and is briefly hypotensive but recovers. Best action: Inform the patient promptly, apologise, explain what happened, and report the incident. Why: Harm occurred and the duty of candour requires immediate openness and reporting.

🎯 KEY TAKEAWAYS

✓ Be honest when things go wrong
✓ Apologise promptly
✓ Explain clearly
✓ Report all incidents and near misses
✓ Support the patient
✓ Document accurately
✓ Promote learning, not blame

🔗 RELATED TOPICS

* → Raising and Acting on Concerns
* → Leadership and Management
* → Decision Making and Consent
* → Confidentiality
* → Professional Integrity

📖 FULL PRACTICE QUESTIONS


Example SJT — Best of 3 (8 options; choose three)

A patient is given an incorrect dose of insulin causing mild hypoglycaemia.

Options:
A. Inform the patient about the error
B. Apologise sincerely
C. Wait for a complaint before disclosing
D. Document the incident in the notes
E. Avoid reporting to protect the team
F. Submit an incident report
G. Blame a colleague
H. Say nothing because harm was mild

👆 Click to reveal correct three

Correct three: A, B, F
• A: Prompt disclosure is required.
• B: Apology is mandatory.
• F: Reporting supports learning.

Why others are weaker/wrong:
• C/E/H: Breach candour and learning duties.
• G: Undermines professionalism.
• D: Important but not one of the primary three.


Example SJT — Rank 5 (best → worst)

A patient deteriorates after a delayed diagnosis.

Options:
A. Be honest, apologise, and explain
B. Report the incident for investigation
C. Inform senior colleagues
D. Wait to see if the patient notices
E. Alter the notes to reduce fallout

👆 Click to reveal ideal order

Ideal order: A (1) > C (2) > B (3) > D (4) > E (5)
• A/C/B: Open, safe, and accountable.
• D: Avoidant and unsafe.
• E: Dishonest and serious misconduct.

📦 QUICK-REFERENCE CARD (Screenshot/Print)
DUTY OF CANDOUR
Inform the patient
Apologise sincerely
Explain honestly
Report the incident
Document clearly
Support learning
RED FLAGS
Hiding errors
Delayed disclosure
Blaming others
Altering records
MEMORY AID
OPEN CAR