Are Your Trust & ICB Services Ready for CQC’s Oliver McGowan Assessment?
For NHS Trusts and Integrated Care Boards (ICBs), compliance with the Oliver McGowan Mandatory Training is no longer a simple tick-box exercise — it has evolved into a system-level assurance priority.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) will assess compliance against the Code of Practice, and inspectors will expect clear, defensible evidence across services, directorates, and commissioned pathways. The question is no longer whether training has been delivered, but how well it is embedded, governed, and evidenced across the system.

What Will CQC Inspectors Be Looking For?
System-Wide Role Mapping
Every role — across clinical, non-clinical, corporate, and commissioned services — must be clearly mapped to Tier 1, Tier 2, or additional training requirements.
Inspectors will expect to see:
A clear and defensible rationale for each tier allocation
Consistency in mapping across divisions and partner organisations
Strong board-level oversight and accountability for compliance
Fragmented or inconsistent approaches across services will quickly raise concerns.
Robust Training Records & Governance Oversight
It is not enough to demonstrate that training has taken place. Trusts and ICBs must show that training delivery is accurate, validated, and properly governed.
This includes evidence of:
Reliable and up-to-date completion data
Verified trainer credentials
Use of the correct, approved version of the training package
Monitoring through formal governance structures and reporting frameworks
Any inconsistencies in data — particularly across services or commissioned partners — are likely to be scrutinised closely.
Demonstrable Competence in Practice
CQC inspections will go beyond ESR reports and attendance figures. The focus will be on whether learning has translated into real-world improvements in care delivery.
Inspectors will look for evidence of:
Obtaining and documenting valid consent
Delivering safe, person-centred care
Upholding dignity and respect in all interactions
Effective safeguarding practices
Making reasonable adjustments to meet individual needs
In short, organisations must show that training is not just completed — but embedded in everyday practice.
The Key Question
If an inspection were announced tomorrow, could your Trust or ICB confidently evidence compliance at scale?
How We Support NHS Organisations
We work with NHS organisations to move beyond basic compliance and build robust, inspection-ready systems. Our support includes:
Auditing and aligning role mapping across services
Strengthening governance reporting and oversight
Validating training records for accuracy and completeness
Evidencing competence in practice across frontline delivery
Final Thoughts
Preparing for the Oliver McGowan assessment is not just about meeting regulatory requirements — it is about demonstrating a genuine commitment to delivering safe, equitable, and person-centred care.
Organisations that take a proactive, system-wide approach will not only be inspection-ready but better equipped to deliver meaningful improvements in patient outcomes.
Further news worth mentioning
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