Nursing and Midwifery Council determination — review hearing
Nurse Abiodun Adejumo no longer impaired after care agency failings, NMC review panel finds
The Nursing and Midwifery Council's Fitness to Practise Committee has allowed a conditions of practice order on nurse Abiodun Folasade Adejumo to lapse, finding her fitness to practise no longer impaired after failings as registered manager of a care agency.
MedicWatch editorial · Published 28 May 2026 · Updated 18 July 2026
No impairment found
Added to MedicWatch: 17 July 2026Report a correction
What does “no impairment found” mean?
The regulator considered the case and found that the practitioner's fitness to practise was not currently impaired. No restrictions are imposed.
Concerning Abiodun Folasade Adejumo, nurse (Nursing and Midwifery Council 03J0403O).
Decision date: 28 May 2026 · Hearing started 28 May 2026
In plain English
The NMC's Fitness to Practise Committee decided that Abiodun Folasade Adejumo's fitness to practise is no longer impaired. At a review hearing on 28 May 2026, the panel found she had developed significant insight, completed relevant training and practised safely for four years, making the risk of repetition extremely low. Her conditions of practice order, imposed in 2022 over management failings at a care agency, will lapse when it expires on 10 July 2026.
Charges
As a registered nurse and registered manager of Standard Care Recruitment Limited, she failed to ensure Care Manager X was registered with the Scottish Social Services Council appropriate to his role; failed to take appropriate action on learning Disclosure Scotland was considering including him on the adults' list; did not ensure service users' care plans and records were of adequate quality; did not ensure adequate systems for service users and families to raise concerns; did not ensure staff were adequately trained to use equipment required to care for service users; did not ensure carers followed advice of medication professionals; failed to promptly report Care Manager X's misconduct to the Care Inspectorate and SSSC following his dismissal; failed to ensure service users were visited by carers at their scheduled times or at all; did not notify the Care Inspectorate of late or missed visits; did not follow the contingency plan when closing Standard Care; and did not ensure unfettered access to the office and care files or adequate knowledge of the service to ensure patient safety.
Findings
At this second review of a substantive conditions of practice order originally imposed in September 2022, the panel found that her fitness to practise is not currently impaired. It considered she had reflected deeply, developed her insight significantly, completed relevant training and provided positive testimonials, with no concerns raised about her clinical practice over four years. It determined the risk of repetition is extremely low. The conditions of practice order will lapse upon expiry at the end of 10 July 2026 in accordance with Article 30(1) of the Nursing and Midwifery Order 2001.
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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