Clinical supervision challenges practice, prevents isolation, provides opportunities to reflect, maintains confidence, and improves practice. Clinical supervision is supportive, safe, centred on developing best practice for patients, challenging and an ongoing practice that should be embedded in all clinicians’ practice. Everyone who has direct patient contact will have clinical supervision. This includes both professionally registered and non-registered staff, and identified non clinical staff with significant patient contact. Clinical supervision must be carried out every 4-6 weeks, including two sessions of safeguarding supervision for clinicians delivering adult services and four sessions for those delivering services to children and young people. Each individual will receive a minimum of one hour clinical supervision every four to six weeks. This could be either group or one to one time. In order to audit and evaluate the process of clinical supervision it is necessary to record that this has taken place and staff can use this to evidence their professional development and for nurses for revalidation.