Retirement or stepping back from general practice marks a significant transition in the professional life of any practitioner. After years spent supporting patients, managing clinical demands, and contributing to local communities, stepping back from practice is both a professional milestone and a personal shift. It is a moment that invites reflection as well as preparation.
For GPs, the path to retirement or taking on different clinical roles involves more than meeting contractual obligations or finalising administrative details. It requires careful consideration of practice succession, financial planning, regulatory responsibilities, and the continuity of patient care. Equally important is acknowledging the dimension of leaving long-standing doctor-patient relationships and the familiar rhythm of work, so as such your personal wellbeing should be a consideration throughout all of this. Below are some considerations to make this process clearer and easier to prepare for.
In the transition period from when you decide to retire or step back to the final working date, there are many areas to consider:
It is key to plan well in advance how to manage your patients. Doctors have a regulatory obligation to ensure continuity of care. The Medical Council guide is very clear on this, and the need to be proactive if retiring from clinical practice e.g. consultant stepping back from HSE work, stopping private practice, or a GP handing back their GMS list.
The guidance states…
IMC Chapter 4, para 40
40. Cessation of practice and transfer of patient care
40.1 Patient care can be impacted where doctors are no longer able to provide care and where continuity of care arrangements are not in place. You should have plans in place to deal with foreseen and unforeseen cessation of practice.
40.2 If you are planning to reduce your patient list or cease practice, you should make arrangements for continuity of patient care and facilitate the transfer of your patients to another doctor or service. You should let your patients know before these arrangements take effect. With the patient’s consent, all relevant medical records should be sent to the doctor taking over the care of the patient.61
Practical steps that doctors should take:
Ensure all opportunistic opportunities are taken by staff to notify patients, such as when calling to make appointment or get results.
If you’ve had no response regarding consent to transfer details within a defined period of time, consider a call to the relevant patients as follow up to notify them of your retirement, explain the handover of care and seek their explicit consent for transfer of their medical records.
Doctors are considered data controllers if they are GPs and private consultants. In compliance with the Data Protection Acts, “Personal data must be kept in a form which permits identification of data subjects for no longer than is necessary for the purposes for which the personal data are processed.”
The Data Protection Commission has issued helpful guidance on the principles of data protection, available on the Commission’s website here: www.dataprotection.ie
The Medical Council’s Guide states…
39. Retention of Medical Records
39.1 “The length of time for which you keep patient records should take account of medical professional requirements to retain records (to support continuity of care, transfer of care and potentially for medicolegal purposes) and data protection principles.”
39.2 “You must keep medical records for as long as required by law or for as long as they remain clinically relevant.”
39.3 “If you have ownership and responsibility for records and receive a request to delete or destroy patient records under data protection principles, you should first consider whether there is a professional and/or medico-legal requirement to retain them. If in doubt about the appropriate time periods and whether deletion of records is appropriate, you should obtain advice from your medical indemnifier, employer or legal adviser.”
In addition, Medical Protection’s factsheet entitled “Medical Records” also includes some relevant record retention periods: Factsheets (medicalprotection.org).
The retention period for records is dependent on the category and type of the relevant medical record. Once you have identified and categorised the data, this will define the appropriate data retention periods.
The HSE record retention periods are a useful guide to retention periods (Record Retention Policy) and have been in operation since August 2024.
ICGP have also issued guidance for GPs which states that you should generally keep records for lifetime of patient +8 years. Records should be archived and/or securely stored in accordance with data protection principles, until such time as they can be securely destroyed.
Healthcare records which have reached their official retention period, should be reviewed under the above criteria to check if they should be destroyed.
If records are to be disposed of, ensure you maintain the confidentiality of the records
According to the HSE guidance, a register of records destroyed should be maintained as proof that the record no longer exists.
The register should show:
For healthcare records, the register of records destroyed should also include:
All confidential records that haven’t met the criteria for destruction, including handwritten notes, computer generated records, test results, copies of correspondence, etc., should be stored securely and protected against accidental loss, including corruption, damage or destruction at all times. Any laptop or remote devices with access to patient records should be fully secure and encrypted and regular back-up should be ensured.
While most practices hold fully electronic records, it is important to be aware that any paper records must also be dealt with appropriately and in accordance with data protection legislation in respect of storage, disposal and access. Paper records should be locked away in a suitable filing cabinet.
If you are involved in the ongoing storage of records once retired or you have left the practice, ensure that there is a plan in place to appoint executor (will) or attorney (EPOA) who understands professional and legal obligations of handling patient records. Consider preparing professional archive inventory and instructions for access and timetable for destruction of records when relevant retention periods have expired.
General issues to be aware of when leaving the practice:
Members must remember to contact Medical Protection membership team to let them know of any changes to working circumstances. This could be a full move to retirement or a change in role, as outlined below:
All of the above, apart from complete retirement and removal from the register (listed as 1), require you to be registered with the Medical Council.
In addition, if you are continuing any form of clinical work, you will need to remain enrolled in a Professional Competency scheme, complete the minimum mandatory amount of CPD and annual audit activity, and pay the annual retention fee.
Professional Competency Schemes have guidance on relevant and appropriate CPD activities from doctors without clinical practice and audit activity that would be considered reasonable in those circumstances
If you do remain in clinical practice (options 2-8 in the above list), you must also ensure have appropriate indemnity for any work that is being undertaken.
As well and notifying your patients of the upcoming changes, there are several other stakeholders that you must communicate the changes to.
HSE
Ensure timely notification to the HSE. GPs are required to give the HSE three months written notice of retirement if they hold a GMS contract. Consultants need to consult their contract of employment and adhere to any notice period. Different contracts will have different employments terms and conditions.
If retiring due to ill health, GPs may be able to access emergency support from the ICGP and the HSE in such circumstances.
Indemnity
Retirement ends your clinical responsibilities but professional liability is ongoing as claims can be notified years after treatment has occurred and doctors have retired. In Ireland it is important to note the statute of limitations, meaning claims can be made up until two years from the date of incident or the date of knowledge. However, minors have until their 18th birthday before the clock starts.
If you are on a claims-made policy, you will require run off cover for claims that are notified when you retired which relate to the care that you provided to patients pre-retirement. You will need to contact your indemnity provider to ensure that you understand the notification obligations and have run off cover in place.
If you are on an occurrence-based offering, you will need to notify the organisation of a change of working circumstances and any work plans during retirement to ensure you have the appropriate indemnity in place for all non-clinical work or other clinical work to be undertaken.
Contact from solicitors and coroners can still occur when retired. It is important to notify your indemnifier as soon as possible if you receive any such communications and that you do not ignore these even if retired.
Medical Council
You have two options if you are retiring and stopping practice, if you undertake any clinical work, you must stay registered with the Medical Council.
Practice staff
Notify other GPs and consultants in practice groups and any employees in good time to allow them to make necessary arrangements. Seek legal and financial advice about any partnership or employment, contractual issues for you, the partners, or employees.
Ensure everyone kept up to date with handover arrangements, if relevant.
You should plan in good time for the financial implications of your retirement or stepping back from practice. There could have tax implications, and you also need to consider your pension funds.
Personal wellbeing should not be overlooked either. This marks a significant transition so lean on your support network, be mindful of looking after yourself, and seek support if needed. Your membership at Medical Protection offers you free and confidential counselling 24/7. For information on this, please read: Wellbeing