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Nursing and Midwifery Council determination — interim orders hearing

NMC panel imposes 18-month interim conditions on nurse Amarachi Ogoke pending inquiry

The Nursing and Midwifery Council's Investigating Committee has imposed an 18-month interim conditions of practice order on registered nurse Amarachi Ogoke while its Case Examiners decide whether there is a case to answer over allegations against her.

MedicWatch editorial · Published 5 June 2026 · Updated 8 July 2026

Interim order imposed (interim restrictions imposed) — 18 months

Added to MedicWatch: 8 July 2026Report a correction

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 Amarachi Ogoke, nurse (Nursing and Midwifery Council 24E0202O).

Decision date: 5 June 2026 · Hearing started 5 June 2026

In plain English

The NMC's Investigating Committee imposed an interim conditions of practice order on registered nurse Amarachi Ogoke for 18 months. The order restricts her to a single, non-agency employer, bars her from being the nurse in charge, and requires direct supervision for medication and oxygen administration until she is assessed as competent, plus fortnightly supervision meetings. The panel noted the Case Examiners have yet to decide whether there is a case to answer in relation to the allegations made against her.

Charges

The specific allegations are not set out in this interim order document. The panel noted that the NMC's Case Examiners have yet to decide whether there is a case to answer in relation to the allegations made against the registrant.

Findings

This was a New Interim Order hearing before the NMC's Investigating Committee; no findings of fact were made. The panel decided to impose an interim conditions of practice order for 18 months. The conditions restrict the registrant to a single substantive, non-agency employer, prohibit her from being the nurse in charge of any shift, require direct supervision for the management and administration of medication and oxygen until she is assessed as competent and indirect supervision at all other times, and require fortnightly supervision meetings and a report on medication and oxygen administration, clinical judgement, caseload management, recognising and escalating patient deterioration and the reporting of medication errors. The order must be reviewed within six months and every six months thereafter.

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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