Public experience of care informing Code and revalidation reviews

Published on 11 December 2025

The experiences of service users are helping to shape the Nursing and Midwifery Council’s (NMC) review of the Code and revalidation process – as the regulator ensures that changes to these key regulatory tools are grounded in what matters most to the public.

The reviews are crucial to ensure that the Code and revalidation process reflect a rapidly evolving health and social care landscape, and support nurses, midwives and nursing associates to deliver the best possible care for people well into the future.

The NMC has set up a new Public Advisory Group for the reviews, formed of people with lived experience of nursing and midwifery care, as well as representatives from charity and advocacy groups, to offer advice to the NMC.

The group’s first meeting last week featured rich discussion on priorities for the new Code and revalidation process, with the group exploring themes such as personalised care, safe ways of working, staff wellbeing, communication, rights, and public understanding of the NMC’s role.

Jacob Lant, Chief Executive of National Voices and co-chair of the Public Advisory Group, said:

“Nurses, midwives and nursing associates are the backbone of the NHS and our wider health and care system, with over 860,000 of them working hard day-in and day-out to keep us safe and well.

“Like many other professions, nursing and midwifery must keep pace with the changes the modern world throws at us. And with the impact of artificial intelligence and the implications of social media in how professionals conduct themselves in and out of work, now is absolutely the right time for the NMC to review the Code that governs the expectations of nursing and midwifery professionals.

“By linking this work with a review of revalidation, the NMC can give professionals clarity on the standards they must uphold, while ensuring continuing professional development and reflective practice directly support this. I look forward to working with the Public Advisory Group and our expert members to put patients and the public at the heart of the process. We want a Code and revalidation process that works for professionals and helps them deliver for patients and the public.”

Since the summer, the NMC has been hearing the voices of professionals, students, the public and others during the initial research-gathering phase of the reviews, including through an ongoing survey which now has over 13,500 responses.

The Public Advisory Group is one of three groups supporting the NMC’s independent steering group, chaired by Professor Sharon Arkell CBE. The NMC has also set up a Breadth of Practice Group, to include a wide range of professional voices, and a Student and Recently Registered Professionals group.

Professor Sharon Arkell CBE said:

“By listening to patients and communities, we ensure the Code and revalidation reflect the values and expectations of the people who nursing and midwifery professionals care for. Collaboration with the public strengthens trust and transparency, while setting standards that are relevant and inclusive.”

Professor Donna O’Boyle MBE, Acting Director of Professional Practice at the NMC, added:

“We’re grateful to our Public Advisory Group for supporting us with our review of the Code and revalidation process.

“Most people’s lives are touched by nursing and midwifery, so it’s vital that the public can input into something that will have such a transformative effect on care.

“Listening to patients, service users and the public is vital to ensuring our standards remain practical, relevant and meaningful across all care settings.”

The regulator will publicly consult on the new Code and revalidation process in September 2026, giving the public and professionals the formal opportunity to have their say.

Currently, people can:

  • Complete the NMC survey, which is open until 31 December.
  • Join the NMC’s community of interest for the Code and revalidation reviews – please sign up here to receive updates, including about future opportunities to get involved.

Other recent news…

Sharp drop in international recruitment slows overall growth of UK Register

Published on 05 December 2025

The number of nurses, midwives and nursing associates who can practise in the UK has risen to a record 860,801 but growth of the workforce has slowed significan


Registrants with complex needs benefitting from Fitness to Practise Health Pilot

Published on 02 December 2025

The Nursing and Midwifery Council’s (NMC) Health Pilot is showing early signs of delivering faster decisions and a more supportive experience for registrants wh


Universities ‘excited to be trail blazers’ of NMC’s new advanced practice principles

Published on 28 November 2025

20 universities across the UK have become early adopters of the Nursing and Midwifery Council’s (NMC) new Principles for Advanced Practice – which for the first

News categories