Primary Source Documents
MPTS — Dr Keith Wolverson (GMC Ref 4328696)
Document Licence
MPTS Records of Determinations are published on mpts-uk.org under the Open Government Licence v3.0. They may be linked, hosted, and quoted. No Open Justice Licence restriction applies. If any High Court appeal judgment is identified in the future via Find Case Law (caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk) or BAILII (bailii.org), those judgments must be linked — not hosted — in compliance with the Open Justice Licence v2.0. Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
MPTS Record of Determinations — April 2026 (Erasure)
The dispositive document. Published by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service, 10 April 2026. Records the tribunal’s determinations on impairment, sanction, and erasure direction at the final review hearing (9–10 April 2026).
Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
MPTS Record of Determinations — October 2025 (Six-Month Suspension)
The determination from the preceding review hearing (9–10 October 2025), which resulted in a six-month suspension order. Published by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service.
Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
MPTS Case Pages (Live Registry)
Primary Source Documents
Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service Review 9-10 Oct 2025
The Tribunal was satisfied that a further period of suspension is the appropriate and proportionate sanction in this case. It determined to impose a suspension for period of 6 months and considered that this will give Dr Wolverson the opportunity to re-engage with the GMC and these proceedings, to gain insight and to demonstrate that he has remediated his misconduct. The Tribunal acknowledged the original 12-month suspension signified the gravity of the misconduct and at this stage considered a shorter suspension appropriate for Dr Wolverson to re-engage and show his remediation but not to be further deskilled from clinical practice.
Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service Review 9-10 Apr 2026
Having balanced all the relevant factors, including the need to protect the public, uphold professional standards, and maintain confidence in the profession, the Tribunal determined that erasure was the only proportionate and appropriate sanction. It concluded that any lesser sanction would fail to address the current and ongoing risk to public protection and would not adequately reflect the seriousness of Dr Wolverson’s misconduct.