The Shipman Inquiry

Completed

Shipman Inquiry

Chair Dame Janet Smith Judge / Judiciary
Established 01 Sep 2001
Final Report 27 Jan 2005

Public inquiry into the murders committed by GP Harold Shipman, who killed at least 250 patients between 1971 and 1998. The inquiry produced six reports examining his crimes, police failings, death certification, controlled drugs, and medical regulation. Led to major reforms including the Medical Examiner system and the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.

Historical inquiry (pre-Inquiries Act 2005). Listed for reference — recommendation progress is not actively tracked.
Legacy & Impact
The Shipman Inquiry, chaired by Dame Janet Smith, examined the crimes of Harold Shipman, a general practitioner who murdered at least 215 patients over a 23-year period — the most prolific serial killer in modern British history. The Inquiry produced six reports between 2002 and 2005, with the final report in January 2005 containing 48 recommendations across areas including death certification, the coroner system, controlled drugs monitoring, and medical regulation.

Twelve recommendations were fully accepted, 29 were accepted in principle, and seven were not accepted. The implementation picture is mixed. Fourteen recommendations have been assessed as fully implemented, while 26 remain in progress and seven were rejected.

The most substantial reform resulting from the Inquiry was the overhaul of the death certification system. The Coroners and Justice Act 2009 introduced provisions for medical examiners to scrutinise death certificates before registration, creating an independent check that could identify patterns of unexpected deaths in a clinical setting. The medical examiner system was rolled out nationally from April 2019, becoming statutory in 2024.

However, several of Dame Janet Smith's recommendations for reforming the General Medical Council's fitness-to-practise processes were accepted only in principle and have been implemented partially. The GMC's revalidation system, introduced in 2012, was a significant reform but has been criticised as insufficient to detect a practitioner actively concealing criminal behaviour. Recommendations for enhanced controlled drugs monitoring were implemented through improved prescribing data systems, though the comprehensive real-time monitoring system Dame Janet envisaged has not been fully realised.

The Inquiry remains a landmark in the regulation of medical practice, even if the full scope of its recommendations has not been delivered.
Lasting Reforms
- Medical examiner system for scrutinising death certificates (statutory from 2024)
- Coroners and Justice Act 2009 reforming the coroner service
- GMC revalidation system for doctors (introduced 2012)
- Enhanced monitoring of controlled drug prescribing patterns
- Reforms to cremation certification processes
Reforms Reversed or Weakened
None identified, though some recommendations were accepted in principle but implemented in a narrower form than recommended
Unfinished Business
- Comprehensive real-time controlled drugs monitoring system not fully realised
- Seven recommendations were not accepted, including some relating to GMC governance reforms
- Twenty-six recommendations remain in progress, including elements of the fitness-to-practise reform programme
Generated 28 Feb 2026 using AI. Assessment is indicative, not authoritative.
Key Legislation
Medical Act 1983 (Amendment) Order 2002
Reformed GMC fitness-to-practise procedures. Contributed to the introduction of medical revalidation (fully implemented December 2012).
Coroners and Justice Act 2009 (Medical Examiners) PRIMARY
Introduced a statutory system of medical examiners to scrutinise all deaths not referred to a coroner. Became operational September 2024.
Implementation Reviewed By
Health Select Committee (Jun 2013)
Reviewed progress on medical revalidation following the inquiry's recommendations. Found that while revalidation had been introduced (December 2012), the system relied heavily on the same appraisal processes the inquiry had identified as inadequate.
Influence & Connections
Influenced by Bristol Heart Inquiry
Both inquiries contributed to fundamental reform of medical regulation. Bristol's findings on clinical governance informed the Shipman Inquiry's recommendations on GMC reform and medical revalidation.
3 years, 4 months Duration
£21m Total Cost
The Shipman Inquiry produced recommendations across six reports (2002–2005), established before the Inquiries Act 2005. The government responded with blanket policy statements rather than per-recommendation responses. Major reforms followed via the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, the Medical Examiner system, and GMC revalidation — but implementation was partial and assessed against the whole inquiry rather than individual recommendations. Individual rec tracking is not meaningful for an inquiry of this age and response pattern.
2 questions since Apr 2018
Written Question Analgesics
Sir Julian Lewis (Conservative)
02 Dec 2024
Written Question Crimes of Violence
Louise Haigh (Labour)
30 Apr 2018
01 Sep 2000
Inquiry Announced
01 Feb 2001
Inquiry Established
27 Jan 2005
Final Report Published