LPS Law

Master the Law.

Expert-curated quizzes covering mental capacity, mental health, and social care law — drawn from a barrister-reviewed knowledge base.

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Comprehensive Coverage

Nine areas of law.
One platform.

From the Mental Capacity Act to NHS law, every question is grounded in primary legislation, statutory guidance, and leading case law.

Mental Capacity Act

72 questions

MCA 2005 principles, capacity assessments, best interests, LPAs, deputies, advance decisions

Deprivation of Liberty

43 questions

DoLS Schedule A1, acid test, Cheshire West, BIA assessments, Article 5 ECHR

Mental Health Act

54 questions

MHA 1983, civil admission, s.2/s.3, CTOs, tribunals, nearest relative

Care Act 2014

39 questions

Assessment, eligibility, safeguarding, charging, ordinary residence, market shaping

Court of Protection

19 questions

COP practice, applications, costs, medical treatment, deprivation of liberty

Continuing Healthcare

24 questions

CHC eligibility, primary health need, DST, disputes, fast-track pathway

NHS Law

49 questions

NHS structure, commissioning, patient choice, complaints, reconfiguration

Human Rights Act

27 questions

HRA 1998, Articles 2, 3, 5, 8, 14, proportionality, public authority duty

Children Act

20 questions

Children Act 1989, welfare principle, threshold criteria, care orders, EPOs

Built for professionals.
Powered by expertise.

Every question is drawn from a barrister-curated knowledge base. No AI hallucinations. No outdated law. Just accurate, traceable content.

Choose Your Focus

Select from nine specialist legal topics and three difficulty levels tailored to your experience.

Test & Learn

Answer ten questions with immediate feedback, statutory references, and detailed explanations for every answer.

Track Progress

Review your score breakdown by topic, identify knowledge gaps, and retake to build mastery.

Accuracy Guaranteed

Every answer cites
the source.

Questions reference specific statutory provisions, case law, and official guidance. Critical corrections — like the difference between “assumption” and “presumption” of capacity — are built in.

“A person must be assumed to have capacity unless it is established that they lack capacity”

s.1(2) MCA 2005

Each explanation includes the statutory reference, why the correct answer is right, and common misconceptions about the wrong answers.

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