Mental Capacity Act 2005 & DoLS Training
Complete Mental Capacity Act and DoLS training online to understand capacity assessment, best interests, lawful care and liberty safeguards.
Intermediate
Mental capacity decisions affect some of the most sensitive areas of health, social care and support practice. Mental Capacity Act 2005 and DoLS training helps care professionals, managers and organisations understand how to support lawful decision-making, protect rights, record defensible decisions and recognise when restrictions may amount to a deprivation of liberty. Poor practice can lead to unsafe care, unlawful restrictions, weak consent records, inspection concerns, safeguarding failures and avoidable distress for people who may lack capacity.
This course helps learners understand the five statutory principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005, decision-specific capacity assessment, supported decision-making, best interests practice, least restriction, DoLS authorisation, Court of Protection pathways, safeguarding links, complex capacity cases, governance, documentation and inspection readiness. It is written for international learners in Global English while making clear that the MCA 2005 and DoLS framework applies in England and Wales, and that other jurisdictions may use different legal systems.
Mental Capacity Act 2005 and DoLS training is professional training that explains how care and support decisions should be made when a person may lack the mental capacity to decide for themselves. It covers lawful decision-making, capacity assessment, best interests, consent, restrictions, deprivation of liberty safeguards, documentation and rights-based care.
This training is designed to help learners understand the difference between helping someone make their own decision and making a decision on their behalf. It also explains why professionals must avoid blanket assumptions, respect autonomy, support communication, consider least-restrictive options and record evidence clearly when care decisions affect a person’s rights, liberty, safety or daily life.
This course is suitable for professionals who support adults who may lack capacity, make care decisions, record best interests decisions or manage restrictions in care settings.
This course is suitable for:
Care workers and support workers who need to understand capacity, consent and day-to-day decision support
Nurses, healthcare assistants and clinical support staff involved in care, treatment, supervision or restrictions
Care home managers and deputy managers responsible for MCA practice, DoLS referrals and inspection readiness
Social care professionals supporting best interests decisions, safeguarding concerns and complex care planning
Safeguarding leads and compliance teams reviewing documentation, policies, training and defensible decisions
Team leaders and supervisors responsible for staff practice, consent records and escalation routes
Professionals supporting people with dementia, autism, learning disability, brain injury or mental health conditions
Organisations seeking structured MCA and DoLS training for care teams, managers and regulated services
Professionals who support adults at risk may also find GSA’s safeguarding vulnerable adults training useful as a related learning pathway.
This MCA and DoLS course covers the practical knowledge needed to understand lawful capacity assessment, best interests decision-making, liberty restrictions, safeguarding links and documentation standards. Learners explore how capacity is decision-specific and time-specific, how supported decision-making works, how to apply the two-stage test, how to use the best interests checklist and how to recognise when restrictions may require legal scrutiny.
The course also covers DoLS in hospitals and care homes, urgent and standard authorisations, relevant person’s representatives, IMCA involvement, Court of Protection routes, post-2026 deprivation of liberty practice, complex capacity cases, coercion, undue influence, self-neglect, covert medication, locked doors, restraint, supervision risks, CQC expectations and governance.
MCA and DoLS training matters because capacity, consent and liberty are not abstract legal concepts. They affect whether a person is supported to make choices, whether care is delivered lawfully and whether restrictions are proportionate, documented and reviewed. A person should not be treated as unable to decide simply because they have a diagnosis, communicate differently or make a decision others consider unwise.
Weak MCA practice can lead to unsafe assumptions, poor care planning, unlawful restrictions, failure to involve the person, weak best interests records, safeguarding gaps and inspection concerns. In care homes and hospitals, DoLS practice also requires clear understanding of authorisation routes, review rights, representation and challenge.
Current deprivation-of-liberty practice is legally complex. Professionals need to understand that case law, official guidance and future reform can affect how restrictions, consent, objection, supervision and locked settings are interpreted. This course supports awareness of those developments without replacing legal advice or workplace-specific decision-making.
Good MCA and DoLS practice also protects dignity. Learners who want to strengthen day-to-day person-centred care may find GSA’s privacy and dignity in care setting course relevant as a related option.
This course helps learners build practical confidence in capacity assessment, best interests thinking, liberty awareness and defensible documentation. For employers, it supports staff training records, safer care planning, inspection readiness, rights-based practice and more consistent decision-making across care teams.