Nursing and Midwifery Council determination — interim orders hearing
Interim restrictions imposed — 18 months
The regulator’s term: interim order imposed
What does “interim restrictions imposed” mean?
An interim order is a precautionary restriction imposed before the regulator's investigation is complete. It is not a finding of fault — the underlying allegations have not yet been adjudicated.
Concerning Bismi Kuruvila Baby, nurse (Nursing and Midwifery Council 24I0092O).
Decision date: 12 March 2026 · Hearing started 12 March 2026
In plain English
The NMC's Investigating Committee imposed an interim conditions of practice order on Bismi Kuruvila Baby, a registered adult nurse from Norfolk, on 12 March 2026. The conditions restrict her to one non-agency employer with a preceptorship programme and require direct supervision during medication administration until she is assessed as competent. The order lasts 18 months and will be reviewed every six months. The NMC's case examiners have not yet decided whether there is a case to answer.
Findings
The NMC's Investigating Committee decided to make an interim conditions of practice order for a period of 18 months. Conditions include restricting practice to one non-agency employer offering a preceptorship programme, direct supervision during medication administration until assessed competent, indirect supervision at other times, no nurse-in-charge duties, and fortnightly reflective discussions with a supervisor. The case examiners have not yet decided whether there is a case to answer.
Source
All facts on this page are drawn from the publicly published Nursing and Midwifery Council determination linked below. MedicWatch does not editorialise the regulator’s findings.
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