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Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service determination — substantive hearing

Struck off the register

The regulator’s term: erasure

What does “struck off the register” mean?

Being struck off (the regulator calls this "erasure") removes the practitioner from the register. They are no longer permitted to practise this profession in the UK. Erasure can be reviewed after a minimum of five years, but is otherwise indefinite.

Concerning Jane Lim, doctor (General Medical Council 3251098).

Decision date: 16 October 2025 · Hearing started 6 October 2025 and ended 16 October 2025

In plain English

The MPTS tribunal considered a misconduct case for Jane Lim. It recorded the decision on impairment as impaired and directed erasure from the medical register. The source PDF contains the tribunal's published reasons, with any private material redacted where required.

Charges

The MPTS PDF background states: 2. Dr Lim obtained her medical degree from the University of London in 1987. She subsequently qualified as a General Practitioner (‘GP’), becoming a GP Partner at Willesden Health Centre and later, The Primrose Hill Surgery, London. She remained at The Primrose Hill Surgery for 15 years. At the time of the events leading to this hearing, Dr Lim was practising as a self-employed GP at London Central and West Unscheduled Care Collaborative (‘LCW’). 3.

Findings

The Medical Practitioners Tribunal considered a misconduct case for Jane Lim. The detail page records impairment as impaired and the tribunal directed erasure from the medical register.

Source

All facts on this page are drawn from the publicly published Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service determination linked below. MedicWatch does not editorialise the regulator’s findings.

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