Regulation.

Regulation of Sport Rehabilitation

³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ regulate the practice of registered Sport Rehabilitators in the UK. Our register is accredited by the Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social (PSA) care who are the UK’s top medical and healthcare oversight body. In addition to ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡, the PSA also oversee the 10 statutory regulators (HCPC, GMC, NMC etc) and the Accredited Registers.

We regulate the profession by setting the standards of training and education, registration, continuing professional development, and standards of ethical conduct and behaviour. We hold registrants accountable to these standards via our fitness to practise process.

Overview of Healthcare Regulation.

Healthcare regulation in the UK is complex with many different regulators - some of which regulate individuals, and some systems and organisations. Below is a brief overview of the regulatory landscape in the UK and how it applies to Sport Rehabilitation.

Professional Standards Authority.

The Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care (PSA) is the UK’s top medical and healthcare oversight body. They PSA oversees the regulators of the various professions working in health and social care.

The primary goal of professional regulation is to ensure public safety with the original health and care professions being statutory regulated (required by law). The UK statutory regulators must meet standards set by the Professional Standards Authority in Health and Social Care (PSA).

The PSA also oversees newer professions under the accredited register scheme; providing professional registration and a commitment to high standards and public protection. Holders of Accredited registers also have to meet the PSA standards, undergoing both continuous and yearly assessments, providing the same level of confidence when choosing health and care practitioners.

These regulators can be split into two groups:

Statutory Regulators

  • General Medical Council (Doctors)

  • Nursing and Midwifery Council (Nurses and Midwifes)

  • Health and Care Professions Council (Physiotherapists and other Allied Healthcare Professions).

  • General Chiropractic Council (Chiropractors)

  • General Osteopathic Council (Osteopaths)

See the list of statutory regulators here.

Accredited Registers

  • ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ (Sport Rehabilitation)

  • BACP and UKCP (Counselling and Psychotherapy)

  • UK Public Health Register (Public Health Consultants and Practitioners)

  • Academy for Healthcare Sciences (Healthcare Scientists)

  • Joint Council for Cosmetic Practitioners (Cosmetics)

See the list of Accredited Registers here.

The role of the PSA in both cases is to set the standards that those regulators must meet, and to hold them accountable to those standards.

The standards for Accredited Registers are published . The latest assessment of ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ against these standards can be found on the PSA website .

Statutory vs Accredited Registers.

Though there are different legal frameworks for each, in a practical sense, statutory registers and accredited registers work in the same way, in that:

  1. Both set standards for education and training in their profession

  2. Both set and publish the requirements for entry to the register

  3. Both investigate complaints and have a fitness to practice process

  4. Both have requirements for ongoing education

  5. Both have a publicly searchable register which includes disciplinary outcomes

  6. Both are assessed against the PSA’s standards.

The type of oversight (statutory vs accredited register) does not reflect the quality or competency of the professional being regulated - this should be based on the published standards for each profession individually.

Comparing Sport Rehabilitation to other professions in MSK healthcare.

³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ is the only organisation holding a PSA Accredited Register for a graduate musculoskeletal profession.

Physios, Osteopaths and Chiropractors belong to the HCPC, GOsC and GCC respectively. All three are statutory registers.

Sports Therapists belong to various membership bodies, none of which have independent oversight from the PSA and self-regulate. Sports Therapists have varying educational standards from vocational courses through to postgraduate degrees. Due to this difference it is important to make the distinction between Sport Rehabilitation and Sports Therapy.

Protection of title.

Sport Rehabilitators do not have legal protection of title in the same way that other statutory regulated healthcare professions do.

Sport Rehabilitators on the ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ register are allowed to use the suffix ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡-reg and make use of the combined ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ / PSA quality mark which is trademarked. Somebody cannot claim to be on the ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ register if they are not.

People often claim the lack of a legally protected title is an issue for Sport Rehabilitation. It isn’t. In exactly the same way an employer would check the HCPC register when employing a Physiotherapist, they can check the ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ register when employing a Sport Rehabilitator. In a practical sense there is no difference. It can also be an offence under other pieces of legislation to misrepresent professional registration - this means there is still recourse for action if somebody is falsely claiming to be registered.

Future statutory regulation.

It is unlikely that any future musculoskeletal professions will be brought into statutory regulation, with the HCPC, or any other regulator.

The purpose of the PSA’s Accredited Register programme is to provide a regulatory framework for newer professions that are not subject to statutory regulation. This is seen as the contemporary form of regulation in healthcare and is supported by Government policy.

The most up-to-date statement of government policy on professional regulation is 2011's 'Enabling excellence – Autonomy and accountability for health care workers, social workers and social care workers' (). This says that, in future, the government will only consider regulating further groups ‘in exceptional circumstances’; where there is a ‘compelling case’ and where accredited registers are considered insufficient to manage the risk involved.  

Regulatory Standards for ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ members.

Education

³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ accredits a number of undergraduate and postgraduate degree programmes around the UK. Accreditation ensures consistency in the content and delivery of education. Only graduates from accredited programmes (and those in the international arrangement) that are eligible to pursue registration with ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡.

Registration Exam

Graduates of accredited programmes must successfully pass the ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ registration exam to register. The exam contains questions that cover the full scope of practice for a Sport Rehabilitator, and rather than having a pass mark of 40% like a university exam, the pass mark is set at a level that would determine the graduate is a competent practitioner, with the score being adjusted based on the difficulty of the questions. This exam is developed and tested by ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡, using a psychrometric process that is overseen and analysed by an independent psychometrician who works on similar projects for the Royal Colleges of Medicine.

This is an extra level of quality assurance that gives confidence to employers, commissioners and the public that the person they are seeing is safe and competent.

We are the first Musculoskeletal profession in the UK to introduce an exam of this kind;  we have done so as part of our International Arrangement with equivalent professions in the USA, Canada and Ireland.

Registration

In order to register with ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡, an applicant must:

  • Have completed a ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ accredited degree

  • Pass the registration exam

  • Be signed off as fit to practise by their university

  • Hold an approved trauma care qualification

  • Complete a declaration relating to cautions and convictions, and fitness to practise

Registration must be renewed on an annual basis and continued compliance with the above standards is assured.

Continued Professional Development

Registrants are required to undertake CPD in order to maintain registration. A percentage of registrants are audited on an annual basis and their CPD is assessed against our standards.

Fitness to Practise

³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ has a published fitness to practise process designed to investigate concerns and complaints about the skill, conduct and behaviour of registrants. Registrants must practice in accordance with the ³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ role delineation and standards of ethical conduct and behaviour.

³Ô¹ÏÏÖ³¡ can impose a range of sanctions in order to protect the public, up to and including removing somebody from the register.

Disciplinary actions are published on our website and appear against a registrants record on the register check.