Nursing and Midwifery Council determination — voluntary removal
NMC agrees removal of nurse Ina Crawford-Carty from register at her own request
The Nursing and Midwifery Council has agreed to remove adult nurse Ina Eulene Crawford-Carty from its register at her own request. Allegations of errors in patient monitoring, medication administration and record keeping had not been proved by any statutory committee.
MedicWatch editorial · Published 30 April 2026 · Updated 11 July 2026
Voluntary erasure accepted (voluntary removal from the register)
Added to MedicWatch: 11 July 2026Report a correction
What does “voluntary removal from the register” mean?
The practitioner asked to be removed from the register and the regulator accepted the request. This may happen during or after a fitness-to-practise case.
Concerning Ina Eulene Crawford-Carty, nurse (Nursing and Midwifery Council 15H0270E).
Decision date: 30 April 2026
In plain English
The NMC agreed to remove Ina Eulene Crawford-Carty, an adult nurse from the West Midlands, from its register at her own request on 30 April 2026. It had been alleged that she made errors in patient assessment and monitoring, medication administration and record keeping, which she accepted. No allegation was proved by a statutory committee. The NMC's Assistant Registrar decided the allegations were not likely to result in a striking-off order and that removal served the public interest.
Charges
It was alleged that Ina Eulene Crawford-Carty made errors in the areas of patient assessment and monitoring, administration of medication, and record keeping. She accepted making errors during the relevant period, which she said were a consequence of extreme and prolonged workplace pressures. No allegation has been found substantively proved by a statutory committee.
Findings
The NMC's Assistant Registrar agreed Ina Eulene Crawford-Carty's application for agreed removal from the register under Rule 14. The Assistant Registrar was satisfied that she no longer intends to work as a registered nurse, that the allegations were not likely to result in a striking-off order, that no other good reasons required further consideration of the allegations, and that the public interest was best served by agreeing the removal. The decision is published for twelve months from 30 April 2026.
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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