An Act relating to the maintenance of proper standards of health
for the public; and for other purposes.
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Act
This Act may be cited as the Public Health Act
1991.
2 Commencement
This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by
proclamation.
3 Definitions
(1) In this Act:approved
means approved by the Minister.
area, in
relation to a local authority, means the area in relation to which the local
authority exercises its functions.
birth means the
birth of a child who has breathed after delivery.
Category 1 medical
condition means a medical condition listed under Category 1 in
Schedule 1.
Category 2 medical
condition means a medical condition listed under Category 2 in
Schedule 1.
Category 3 medical
condition means a medical condition listed under Category 3 in
Schedule 1.
Category 4 medical
condition means a medical condition listed under Category 4 in
Schedule 1.
Category 5 medical
condition means a medical condition listed under Category 5 in
Schedule 1.
delivery, in
relation to a child or still-born child, means the complete expulsion or
extraction of the child or still-born child from the mother.
Director-General means the
Director-General, Department of Health.
environmental health
officer means a holder of that office who is:
(a) an officer of the Department of Health, or
(b) an employee of a local authority, or
(c) an employee of a public health organisation within the meaning of
the Health Services Act
1997.
(d) (Repealed)
local
authority means:
(a) a council within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1993,
or
(b) the Western Lands Commissioner, or
(c) the Lord Howe Island Board.
medical
district means a medical district described in an order in force
under section 63.
medical
officer of health means a medical practitioner holding office under
section 62 as a medical officer of health.
nursing
home means a facility at which residential care (within the meaning
of the Aged Care Act 1997 of the
Commonwealth) is provided and in relation to which any one or more of the
following is satisfied:
(a) a licence was in force, or an approval of an application for a
licence in principle was effective, under the Nursing Homes Act 1988 in relation
to the facility immediately before the repeal of that Act,
(b) residential care is provided at the facility in relation to an
allocated place under the Aged Care Act
1997 of the Commonwealth and that place requires a high level
of residential care within the meaning of that Act,
(c) the facility belongs to a class of facilities prescribed by the
regulations.
occupier, in
relation to premises or a part of premises, means:
(a) a person who has the right to occupy the premises or part to the
exclusion of the owner, or
(b) the person who is the owner of the premises or part if there is no
person with a right to occupy the premises or part to the exclusion of the
owner,
even if the premises are, or the part is, vacant.perinatal
death means:
(a) the death of a child on the day of his or her birth or within the
next succeeding 28 days, or
(b) a still-birth.
premises
means:
(a) a building or other structure on land, or
(b) vacant land, or
(c) a vessel, or
(d) an aircraft.
public
authority means an incorporated or unincorporated body constituted
by or under an Act for public purposes.
public health
order means a public health order in force under section
23.
scheduled medical
condition means a medical condition listed in Schedule
1.
still-birth means the birth of
a child that exhibits no sign of respiration or heartbeat, or other sign of
life, after birth and that:
(a) is of at least 20 weeks’ gestation, or
(b) if it cannot be reliably established whether the period of
gestation is more or less than 20 weeks, has a body mass of at least 400 grams
at birth.
Tribunal
means the Administrative Decisions Tribunal established by the Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997.
(2) In this Act:(a) a reference to a function includes a reference to a power,
authority and duty, and
(b) a reference to the exercise of a function includes, in relation to
a duty, a reference to the performance of the duty.
(3) Notes included in this Act do not form part of this
Act.
Part 2 Health risks generally
4 Orders and directions during state of emergency
(1) This section applies if:(a) action is being taken under the State Emergency and Rescue Management Act
1989 in relation to an emergency within the meaning of that
Act, and
(b) the Minister, in consultation with the Minister administering that
Act, decides on reasonable grounds that the emergency could result in a
situation (including the spread of a scheduled medical condition) under which
the health of the public is, or is likely to be, at risk,
and
(c) the Minister administering that Act agrees that action should be
taken under this section.
(2) If this section applies, the Minister:(a) may, by order published in the Gazette, give such directions,
and
(b) if such an order is in force, may take such
action,
as the Minister considers to be necessary to avert or deal with the risk
and any of its possible consequences.
(3) An order published under this section may direct all
persons:(a) in a specified group, or
(b) residing in a specified area,
to submit themselves for medical examination as provided by the
order.
(4) Subsection (3) and the other provisions of this Act do not affect
the generality of subsection (2).
(5) A person (other than a public authority) who:(a) is subject to a direction under this section,
and
(b) has notice of the direction, and
(c) refuses or fails to comply with the
direction,
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months.
(6) A public authority has a duty to comply with a direction given to
the public authority under this section.
(7) Unless it is earlier revoked, an order published under this
section expires on cessation of the emergency on which it was
based.
(8) A function exercised under this section in an emergency in respect
of which a state of emergency exists under Division 4 of Part 2 of the State Emergency and Rescue Management Act
1989 has effect as a function exercised in the execution of
that Division.
5 Public health risks generally
(1) If the Minister considers, on reasonable grounds, that a situation
has arisen under which the health of the public is, or is likely to be, at
risk and, in relation to the situation:(a) action under the State
Emergency and Rescue Management Act 1989 is neither
contemplated nor underway, and
(b) the Premier has approved the taking of action under this
section,
the Minister may take such action, and may by order published in the
Gazette give such directions, as the Minister considers to be necessary to
deal with the risk and any of its possible
consequences.
(2) If an order in force under this section declares a specified area
to be a public health risk area, the action taken and directions given may be
such as the Minister considers to be necessary:(a) to reduce or remove any risk to the health of the public in the
area, and
(b) to segregate or isolate inhabitants of the area,
and
(c) to prevent, or conditionally permit, access to the
area.
(3) Subsection (2) does not affect the generality of subsection
(1).
(4) A person (other than a public authority) who:(a) is subject to a direction given under this section,
and
(b) has notice of the direction, and
(c) refuses or fails to comply with the
direction,
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months.
(5) A public authority has a duty to comply with a direction given to
the public authority under this section.
(6) An order published under this section expires on a date that is
specified in the order as its expiry date and is not more than 28 days later
than the publication of the order.
(7) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to any entry on
premises required or directed for the purposes of this
section.
6 Disinfection or destruction of articles
(1) This section applies to an article that:(a) has been in contact with a person suffering from an infectious
disease that is transmissible by contact with the article,
or
(b) is verminous, or
(c) is likely to be verminous, or dangerous, or prejudicial to health,
because it has been used by a person infested with
vermin.
(2) If the Director-General:(a) has reasonable grounds for suspecting that there is on any
premises an article to which this section applies, and
(b) by written order authorises a person to enter the premises and
take action under this section,
the person may enter the premises, seize any article found there that
might reasonably be suspected of being an article to which this section
applies and there or elsewhere disinfect or destroy
it.
(3) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to the powers of
entry conferred by this section.
(4) A person (other than a public authority) who, without reasonable
excuse:(a) transfers possession of an article to another person,
or
(b) exposes an article to another person, or
(c) removes an article,
knowing it to be an article to which this section applies is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months.
(5) A public authority has a duty to avoid doing anything that, if
done by a person other than a public authority, would be an offence under this
section.
(6) A person who suffers damage as a result of the disinfection or
destruction of an article under this section is entitled to reasonable
compensation unless the condition of the article that necessitated its
disinfection or destruction was attributable to an act or default of the
person.
(7) Compensation under this section is payable out of money provided
by Parliament.
7 (Repealed)
8 Closure of premises
(1) If the Minister considers on reasonable grounds that any premises
on which the public, or sections of the public, are required, permitted or
accustomed to congregate should be closed in order to preserve the health of
the public, the Governor may, by order published in the Gazette, direct that
the premises be closed, and kept closed, in accordance with the order while it
is in force.
(2) If:(a) a direction given under this section is in force in relation to
premises that are not under the control of a Minister, and
(b) a person who controls, or is involved in the control of, the
premises is notified of the direction,
the person must take such reasonably practicable action as may be
necessary to ensure compliance with the direction.
(3) A person who, after being notified under subsection (2) of a
direction given under this section, fails to comply with that subsection is
guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months.
9 Directions to public authorities
(1) If the Minister considers, on reasonable grounds, that the health
of the public is, or is likely to be, endangered because of an action by a
public authority, the Minister may direct the public authority to rectify any
adverse consequences of the action by taking other specified
action.
(2) It is the duty of a public authority to comply with any direction
given to the public authority under this section.
(3) The generality of this section is not affected by any other
provision of this Act.
10 Direction to exercise statutory function
(1) If the Minister considers, on reasonable grounds:(a) that a public authority has failed to exercise a function
conferred or imposed on it (other than a power to make regulations or
by-laws), and
(b) that the failure is likely to endanger the health of the
public,
the Minister may, by written notice to the public authority, require it
to exercise the function within a time stated in the
notice.
(2) If a notice given under this section is not complied with, the
Minister may exercise the function to which the notice relates and:(a) unless the public authority represents the Crown—recover, as
a debt owed by the public authority to the Crown, an amount equal to the cost
of exercising the function, or
(b) if the public authority represents the Crown—require the
public authority to pay to the Department of Health an amount equal to the
cost of exercising the function.
Part 2A Provision and promotion of health services
Division 1 Preliminary
10AA Definitions
In this Part:health
practitioner, health registration
Act, health
service and registration
authority have the same meanings as in the Health Care Complaints Act
1993.
Note. The Health Care Complaints Act
1993 defines those terms as follows:
health
practitioner means a natural person who provides a health service
(whether or not the person is registered under a health registration
Act).
health
registration Act means any of the following Acts:
Chiropractors Act
2001
Dental Technicians Registration
Act 1975
Dental Practice Act
2001
Medical Practice Act
1992
Nurses and Midwives Act
1991
Optical Dispensers Act
1963
Optometrists Act
2002
Osteopaths Act
2001
Pharmacy Act
1964
Physiotherapists Act
2001
Podiatrists Act
2003
Psychologists Act
2001.
health
service includes the following services, whether provided as public
or private services:
(a) medical, hospital and nursing services,
(b) dental services,
(c) mental health services,
(d) pharmaceutical services,
(e) ambulance services,
(f) community health services,
(g) health education services,
(h) welfare services necessary to implement any services referred to
in paragraphs (a)–(g),
(i) services provided by podiatrists, chiropractors, osteopaths,
optometrists, physiotherapists, psychologists and optical
dispensers,
(j) services provided by dietitians, masseurs, naturopaths,
acupuncturists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, audiologists,
audiometrists and radiographers,
(k) services provided in other alternative health care
fields,
(k1) forensic pathology services,
(l) a service prescribed by the regulations as a health service for
the purposes of this Act.
registration
authority means the person who has the function, under a health
registration Act, of determining an application for registration under the
Act.
medical
student has the same meaning as in the Medical Practice Act
1992.
registered midwife
and registered
nurse have the same meanings as in the Nurses and Midwives Act
1991.
10AB Proceedings for offences under this Part
(1) Proceedings for an offence under this Part may be instituted by
the Director-General, a registration authority, the Health Care Complaints
Commission or by any other person.
(2) Proceedings for an offence under this Part may be commenced at any
time within, but not later than, 2 years after the date on which the offence
is alleged to have been committed.
Division 2 Restricted health services
10AC Spinal manipulation
(1) A person must not engage in spinal manipulation in the course of
providing a health service unless the person:(a) is a registered chiropractor, or a chiropractic student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered chiropractor,
or
(b) is a registered medical practitioner, or a medical student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered medical practitioner,
or
(c) is a registered osteopath, or an osteopathy student acting under
the appropriate supervision of a registered osteopath, or
(d) is a registered physiotherapist, or a physiotherapy student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered
physiotherapist.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, spinal manipulation is a
restricted health service.
(3) An authorised person or inspector appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Chiropractors Act
2001,
(b) Medical Practice Act
1992,
(c) Osteopaths Act
2001,
(d) Physiotherapists Act
2001.
(4) In this section:spinal
manipulation means the rapid application of a force (whether by
manual or mechanical means) to any part of a person’s body that affects
a joint or segment of the vertebral column.
10AD Prescribed electrophysical treatments
(1) A person must not provide a prescribed electrophysical treatment
in the course of providing a health service unless the person:(a) is a registered chiropractor, or a chiropractic student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered chiropractor,
or
(b) is a registered medical practitioner, or a medical student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered medical practitioner,
or
(c) is a registered osteopath, or an osteopathy student acting under
the appropriate supervision of a registered osteopath, or
(d) is a registered physiotherapist, or a physiotherapy student acting
under the appropriate supervision of a registered physiotherapist,
or
(e) is a registered podiatrist, or a podiatry student acting under the
appropriate supervision of a registered podiatrist.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, prescribed electrophysical
treatment is a restricted health service.
(3) An inspector or authorised person appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Chiropractors Act
2001,
(b) Medical Practice Act
1992,
(c) Osteopaths Act
2001,
(d) Physiotherapists Act
2001,
(e) Podiatrists Act
2003.
(4) In this section:prescribed
electrophysical treatment means an electrophysical treatment
prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
section.
10AE Prescribing of contact lenses, spectacle lenses and
other appliances
(1) A person must not prescribe an optical appliance unless the
person:(a) is a registered optometrist, or
(b) is a registered medical practitioner, or
(c) is a member of a class of persons declared by the regulations to
be authorised to prescribe an optical appliance and the person acts in
compliance with any conditions or limitations prescribed by the
regulations.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, prescribing an optical
appliance is a restricted health service.
(3) A person who prescribes an optical appliance for a person must on
request provide the person, at no extra charge, with a copy of the
prescription.Maximum penalty: 5 penalty
units.
(4) A person who does not prescribe, but dispenses, an optical
appliance for a person must provide the person, at no extra charge, with a
copy of the prescription relating to the appliance.Maximum penalty: 5 penalty
units.
(5) A person who prescribes contact lenses for a person is not
required to comply with subsection (3) until after he or she has completed the
prescription and fitting process in relation to the contact
lenses.
(6) An authorised person or inspector appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Optometrists Act
2002,
(b) Medical Practice Act
1992.
(7) In this section:optical
appliance means contact lenses, spectacle lenses or any other
appliance designed to correct, remedy or relieve any refractive abnormality or
defect of sight.
10AF Restricted dental practices
(1) A person must not carry out a restricted dental practice unless
the person is:(a) a registered dentist, or
(b) a registered medical practitioner, or
(c) a registered dental student undertaking clinical studies, or
undertaking a clinical placement at a public health organisation,
or
(d) a registered dental auxiliary who is carrying out dental auxiliary
activities subject to the practice oversight of a registered dentist,
or
(e) a person performing radiographic work at a public health
organisation, or on the order or at the request of a registered medical
practitioner or registered dentist, or
(f) a dental prosthetist carrying out a practice of dental
prosthetics, or
(g) a dental technician carrying out technical work on the written
order of a registered dentist or of a dental
prosthetist.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, restricted dental practice is a
restricted health service.
(3) An authorised person or inspector appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Dental Practice Act
2001,
(b) Dental Technicians Registration
Act 1975,
(c) Medical Practice Act
1992.
(4) In this section:dental auxiliary
activity has the same meaning as in the Dental Practice Act
2001.
dental
prosthetist has the same meaning as in the Dental Technicians Registration Act
1975.
dental
technician means any of the following:
(a) a person registered as a dental technician under the Dental Technicians Registration Act
1975,
(b) a person approved by the Dental Technicians Registration Board
under section 13 (2) (f) of the Dental
Technicians Registration Act 1975,
(c) a person undergoing in good faith training in technical work under
the supervision of a registered dentist or of a person referred to in
paragraph (a),
(d) an apprentice, within the meaning of the Apprenticeship and Traineeship Act
2001, employed by a person referred to in paragraph (a), or by
a person employing a person referred to in paragraph
(a).
practice of
dental prosthetics has the same meaning as in section 5 (3) of the
Dental Technicians Registration Act
1975.
practice
oversight means oversight by a registered dentist in accordance with
guidelines approved by the Director-General from time to time.
public health
organisation has the same meaning as in the Health Services Act
1997.
registered dental
student means a person registered as a dentistry student or a dental
auxiliary student under section 138 of the Dental Practice Act
2001.
restricted dental
practice means any of the following practices:
(a) the performance of any operation on the human teeth or jaws or
associated structures,
(b) the correction of malpositions of the human teeth or jaws or
associated structures,
(c) the performance of radiographic work in connection with the human
teeth or jaws or associated structures,
(d) the mechanical construction or the renewal or repair of artificial
dentures or restorative dental appliances,
(e) the performance of any operation on, or the giving of any
treatment or advice to, any person that is preparatory to or for the purpose
of the fitting, insertion, adjusting, fixing, constructing, repairing or
renewing of artificial dentures or restorative dental
appliances.
technical work has
the same meaning as in section 5 (1) of the Dental Technicians Registration Act
1975.
written
order means an order:
(a) in a form prescribed for the purposes of issuing directions to
dental technicians under the Dental Practice
Act 2001, or
(b) in a form prescribed for the purposes of section 27 (b) (ii) of
the Dental Technicians Registration Act
1975.
10AG Restricted birthing practices
(1) A person must not engage in a restricted birthing practice unless
the person is:(a) a registered midwife, or
(b) a registered medical practitioner, or
(c) a medical student or a registered nurse acting under the
appropriate supervision of a medical practitioner or of a registered midwife,
or
(d) a midwifery student acting under the appropriate supervision of a
registered midwife.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, a restricted birthing practice
is a restricted health service.
(3) This section does not apply to the rendering of assistance to a
woman who is giving birth to a child where the assistance is rendered in an
emergency.
(4) An authorised person or inspector appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Nurses and Midwives Act
1991,
(b) Medical Practice Act
1992.
(5) In this section:restricted
birthing practice means the care of a pregnant woman involving the
management of the 3 stages of labour and child birth.
10AH Certain foot care services not to be provided by
unregistered persons
(1) A person must not, in the course of providing a foot care service,
perform any invasive procedure on the feet or toenails under anaesthesia
unless the person is:(a) a registered podiatrist, or
(b) a registered medical practitioner.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) A person must not, in the course of providing a foot care service,
carry out surgical debridement of hypertrophic tissue of the foot using a
sharp instrument unless the person is:(a) a registered podiatrist, or
(b) a registered medical practitioner, or
(c) a registered nurse and the debridement is carried out to the
extent necessary to provide immediate relief from pain or
discomfort.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) A person must not, in the course of providing a foot care service,
treat a disorder of or injury to the foot knowing that the person
treated:(a) has a medical condition causing inadequate blood circulation to
their feet, or
(b) has peripheral neuropathy affecting their
feet,
unless the person providing that treatment is:(c) a registered podiatrist, or
(d) a registered medical practitioner, or
(e) a registered nurse, or
(f) a registered chiropractor, or
(g) a registered osteopath, or
(h) a registered physiotherapist, or
(i) a registered pharmacist.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(4) For the purposes of this Division, a procedure or treatment
referred to in subsection (1), (2) or (3) that is carried out in the
circumstances set out in those subsections is a restricted health
service.
(5) An authorised person or inspector appointed under any of the
following Acts is authorised to ascertain whether this section is being
complied with:(a) Podiatrists Act
2003,
(b) Medical Practice Act
1992,
(c) Nurses and Midwives Act
1991.
(6) An authorised person or inspector is not to exercise any function
under subsection (5) except with the approval of the Director-General given in
a particular case.
10AI Restricted health services—powers of authorised
officers appointed under other Acts
(1) An authorised officer, who is authorised under this Division to
ascertain whether a provision of this Division is being complied with, has and
may exercise for that purpose all the functions that the authorised officer
has under the officer’s Act for the purpose of ascertaining whether a
provision of the officer’s Act is being complied with or has been
contravened.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1):(a) the functions of the authorised officer under the officer’s
Act apply in respect of premises on which a person engages in a restricted
health service in the course of providing a health service in the same way as
those functions apply in respect of premises on which a person engages in
professional practice under the officer’s Act, and
(b) the functions of the authorised officer under the officer’s
Act apply in respect of engaging in the restricted health service in the
course of providing a health service in the same way as they apply in respect
of professional practice engaged in under the officer’s Act,
and
(c) the provisions of an officer’s Act with respect to the
functions of an inspector, authorised officer or authorised person (including
any provision that creates an offence in connection with those functions)
extend to the exercise of functions of the authorised officer under this
section as if the functions under this section were exercised under the
officer’s Act.
(3) In this section:authorised
officer means an authorised person or inspector who is authorised to
ascertain whether a particular section of this Division is being complied
with.
officer’s Act,
in relation to an authorised officer, means the Act under which the authorised
officer is appointed as an authorised person or inspector.
restricted health
service means a health service that is specified to be a restricted
health service for the purposes of this Division.
Division 3 Health practitioners who are de-registered or
subject to prohibition orders
10AJ Definitions
(1) In this Division:corresponding
health registration legislation means legislation of another State
or Territory that provides for the registration of health
practitioners.
de-registered
health practitioner means a health practitioner whose registration
as a health practitioner under a health registration Act or corresponding
health registration legislation is cancelled or suspended as a result of
disciplinary proceedings.
prohibition
order means a prohibition order made under a health registration Act
or under section 41A of the Health Care
Complaints Act 1993.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, a person’s registration
as a health practitioner under a health registration Act or corresponding
health registration legislation is cancelled if:(a) any of the following happen as a result of an action, decision,
determination or order of a registration board, tribunal or court under that
Act or legislation:(i) the person’s registration is cancelled,
(ii) the person is de-registered,
(iii) the person’s name is removed from, or struck off, a register
or a roll,
(iv) the person’s practising certificate is cancelled,
or
(b) the person’s name is removed from the Register of Optical
Dispensers for New South Wales under section 25 of the Optical Dispensers Act
1963.
(3) For the purposes of this Division, a health practitioner is
subject to a prohibition order if the health practitioner is, because of the
order, subject to conditions when providing health services or is prohibited
from providing some or all health services.
10AK Provision of health services by persons who are
de-registered or subject to prohibition orders
(1) A person must not provide a health service in contravention of a
prohibition order.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) A de-registered health practitioner must, before providing a
health service to a person, ensure that the following persons are notified, in
accordance with the regulations, that the health practitioner was registered
under a particular health registration Act or corresponding health
registration legislation and that the health practitioner’s registration
under that Act or legislation has been cancelled or suspended:(a) the person to whom the health practitioner intends to provide the
health service or, if that person is under 16 years of age or under
guardianship, a parent or guardian of the person,
(b) if the health service is to be provided by the health practitioner
as an employee, the health practitioner’s
employer.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) A health practitioner who is subject to a prohibition order must,
before providing a health service to a person, ensure that the following
persons are notified, in accordance with the regulations, that the health
practitioner is subject to the order:(a) the person to whom the health practitioner intends to provide the
health service or, if that person is under 16 years of age or under
guardianship, a parent or guardian of the person,
(b) if the health service is to be provided by the health practitioner
as an employee, the health practitioner’s
employer.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
10AL Advertising of health services if person is
de-registered or subject to a prohibition order
(1) A person must not advertise a health service that is to be
provided by a de-registered health practitioner unless the advertisement
specifies that the health practitioner was registered under a particular
health registration Act or corresponding health registration legislation and
that the health practitioner’s registration under that Act or
legislation is cancelled or suspended.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) A person must not advertise a health service that is to be
provided by a health practitioner who is subject to a prohibition order unless
the advertisement specifies that the health practitioner is subject to the
order.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) A person is not guilty of an offence under this section if he or
she did not know, and could not reasonably have known, that the health
practitioner was de-registered or subject to a prohibition
order.
Division 4 Miscellaneous
10AM Codes of conduct for unregistered health
practitioners
(1) The regulations may prescribe codes of conduct for the provision
of health services by:(a) health practitioners who are not required to be registered under a
health registration Act (including de-registered health practitioners),
and
(b) health practitioners who are registered under a health
registration Act who provide health services that are unrelated to their
registration.
(2) Before a code of conduct is prescribed under subsection (1), the
Minister is to:(a) give public notice of the code in a form and manner determined by
the Minister, specifying where the code can be inspected and the time and
manner in which submissions may be made, and
(b) place the draft code and an impact assessment statement for the
code on public exhibition for not less than 21 days, and
(c) consider any submission received within 21 days (or such longer
period as the Minister may determine) after the end of that exhibition
period.
Note. Section 41A of the Health Care
Complaints Act 1993 permits the Health Care Complaints
Commission to make a prohibition order in respect of a health practitioner if
the Commission finds that the health practitioner has breached the code of
conduct and poses a substantial risk to the health of members of the public.
The Commission is also able to cause a public statement to be issued in such
circumstances identifying and giving warnings about the health
practitioner.
10AN Advertisement or promotion of health services
A person must not advertise or otherwise promote the provision of
a health service in a manner that:(a) is false, misleading or deceptive, or
(b) is likely to mislead or deceive, or
(c) creates, or is likely to create, an unjustified expectation of
beneficial treatment.
Maximum penalty:
(a) for a first offence—100 penalty units,
or
(b) for a second or subsequent offence—200 penalty
units.
Part 2B Safety of drinking water
Division 1 Preliminary
10A Definitions
In this Part:boil water
advice, in relation to drinking water, means a statement to the
effect that the water should not be used for human consumption (or for
purposes connected with human consumption) until after it has been boiled or
otherwise treated.
Chief
Health Officer means the Chief Health Officer of the Department of
Health.
drinking
water means water that is intended, or likely, to be used:
(a) for human consumption, or
(b) for purposes connected with human consumption, such as the washing
or cooling of food or the making of ice for consumption or for the
preservation of unpackaged food,
whether or not the water is used for other purposes.record
means:
(a) a documentary record, or
(b) a record made by an electronic, electromagnetic, photographic or
optical process, or
(c) any other kind of record.
supplier of drinking
water (or supplier) means:
(a) Sydney Water Corporation,
(b) Hunter Water Corporation,
(c) a water supply authority within the meaning of the Water Management Act
2000,
(d) a local council or a county council exercising water supply
functions under Division 2 of Part 3 of Chapter 6 of the Local Government Act
1993,
(e) the Lord Howe Island Board within the meaning of the Lord Howe Island Act
1953,
(f) a licensed network operator or licensed retail supplier within the
meaning of the Water Industry Competition
Act 2006,
(g) any person who treats or supplies water on behalf of a person
referred to in any of the preceding paragraphs,
(h) any person supplying drinking water in the course of a commercial
undertaking (other than that of supplying bottled or packaged drinking water),
being a person who has not received the water:(i) from a person referred to in any of the preceding paragraphs,
or
(ii) in the form of bottled or packaged
water.
treatment
of water means any process or technique used to improve the quality
of water.
Division 2 Functions of Chief Health Officer in relation to
drinking water
10B Advice to public
(1) The Chief Health Officer may from time to time prepare advice, for
the benefit of the public, concerning the safety of available drinking water
(or drinking water available from a particular supplier) and any possible
risks to health involved in the consumption of that
water.
(2) An advice under this section may include a boil water
advice.
(3) The Chief Health Officer is to provide any advice prepared under
this section to the relevant supplier of drinking
water.
(4) A supplier of drinking water must issue the advice provided to it
under this section to the public in such form and manner as the
Director-General may from time to time direct by notice in writing to the
supplier.Maximum penalty: 10,000 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) or 2,500 penalty units (in any other
case).
(5) Nothing in subsection (3) or (4) prevents the Chief Health Officer
from also issuing the advice to the public as the Chief Health Officer sees
fit.
10C Correction of misleading information
(1) The Chief Health Officer may, by notice in writing given to a
supplier of drinking water, direct the supplier to retract or correct any
information or advice issued, by or on behalf of the supplier, to the public
in relation to the safety of the supplier’s drinking water if the Chief
Health Officer is of the opinion that the information or advice is inaccurate,
incomplete or otherwise misleading.
(2) The Chief Health Officer may specify any one or more of the form,
content and manner of the retraction or correction and of its
publication.
(3) A supplier of drinking water who is given a direction under this
section must comply with the direction as and when required by the
direction.Maximum penalty: 10,000 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) or 2,500 penalty units (in any other
case).
(4) If the supplier of drinking water fails to comply with the
direction within the time specified in the direction, the Chief Health Officer
may issue the retraction or correction on behalf of the
supplier.
10D Chief Health Officer may delegate
The Chief Health Officer may delegate to any officer of the
Department of Health any of the Chief Health Officer’s functions
(including the function specified in section 10E (4), but excluding this power
of delegation) under this Part.
Division 3 Functions of Director-General in relation to
drinking water
10E Power to declare Chief Health Officer solely responsible
for determining necessity for boil water advices
(1) The Director-General may, by order published in the Gazette,
declare that, in relation to a supplier of drinking water specified in the
order, the function specified in subsection (4) is to be exercised only by the
Chief Health Officer.
(2) A declaration under this section operates to confer the power to
exercise the function on the Chief Health Officer.
(3) The Director-General is taken to have published such orders in
relation to Sydney Water Corporation and Hunter Water Corporation on the
commencement of this section. The Director-General may, by further order
published in the Gazette, amend or revoke an order so taken to have been
published.
(4) The function concerned is that of deciding from time to
time:(a) whether a boil water advice is to be issued in respect of the
drinking water supplied or available for supply by the supplier,
and
(b) if a boil water advice is to be issued—the additional
information (if any) that is to be provided to the public in connection with
it, and
(c) whether a boil water advice that has been issued is to be
withdrawn.
10F Power to enter and inspect premises of
supplier
(1) Any person authorised by the Director-General for the purposes of
this section may enter any premises of a supplier of drinking water and do any
one or more of the following on those premises:(a) examine and inspect any apparatus, equipment or
works,
(b) take and remove samples of any water,
(c) take and remove samples of any substance used in, or produced by,
the treatment of water on those premises,
(d) require samples referred to in paragraph (b) or (c) to be taken
and given to the person or to another person or to the
Director-General,
(e) take such photographs, films and audio, video and other recordings
as the person considers necessary,
(f) require records to be produced for inspection,
(g) examine, inspect and copy any records,
(h) make such other examinations, inquiries and tests as the person
considers necessary.
(2) Despite section 74, the maximum penalty that may be imposed on a
person who wilfully intimidates, obstructs or hinders a person authorised by
the Director-General for the purposes of this section who is exercising, or
attempting to exercise, a function under this section is 2,500 penalty units
(in the case of a corporation) or 400 penalty units (in any other
case).
10G Power to require testing of drinking water
(1) The Director-General may, by notice in writing given to a supplier
of drinking water, direct the supplier to carry out such tests on water that
it has available for supply, or on any substance used in or produced by the
treatment of such water, as the Director-General considers
appropriate.
(2) A direction given under this section may specify that the test to
be carried out on water is to be carried out in any one or more of the
following ways:(a) on the water in its raw state, or
(b) while the water is undergoing treatment, or
(c) after the water has been treated or partly
treated.
(3) A supplier of drinking water who is given a direction under this
section must comply with the direction as and when required by the
direction.Maximum penalty: 2,500 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) or 400 penalty units (in any other
case).
10H Power to require production of information
(1) The Director-General may, by notice in writing given to a supplier
of drinking water, direct the supplier to produce to the Director-General such
information as the Director-General may specify concerning:(a) the quality of the drinking water that the supplier has available
for supply, and
(b) the methods by which the water has been
treated.
(2) The information required may include (but is not limited to) the
following:(a) copies of relevant records of the supplier,
(b) the results of any tests required under section
10G.
(3) The information is to be provided in such form and manner as the
Director-General may direct.
(4) A supplier of drinking water who is given a direction under this
section must comply with the direction as and when required by the
direction.Maximum penalty: 2,500 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) or 400 penalty units (in any other
case).
Division 4 General
10I Closure of water supply
(1) This section applies to water in, or flowing from, any source
if:(a) the water is drinking water and the Minister has reason to suspect
that the water is not fit for human consumption, or
(b) the Minister suspects on reasonable grounds that the water
constitutes (or is likely to constitute) a risk to public
health.
(2) The Minister may take such action, and give such directions by
notice in writing to any person or class of persons, as the Minister considers
necessary:(a) to restrict or prevent the use of any water to which this section
applies, and
(b) to bring the water to such a condition that it is no longer unfit
for human consumption or a risk (or a likely risk) to public
health.
(3) Before giving a direction under this section to any of the
suppliers of drinking water referred to in the following paragraphs (or to any
person who treats or supplies water on behalf of the supplier), the Minister
is to consult with the Minister specified in respect of the supplier:(a) Sydney Water Corporation—the Minister administering the
Water Board (Corporatisation) Act
1994,
(b) Hunter Water Corporation—the Minister administering the
Hunter Water Board (Corporatisation) Act
1991,
(c) a water supply authority within the meaning of the Water Management Act 2000 (other
than State Water Corporation)—the Minister administering the Water Management Act
2000,
(c1) State Water Corporation—the Minister administering the
State Water Corporation Act
2004,
(d) a local council or a county council that supplies water under the
Local Government Act
1993—both the Minister administering that Act and the
Minister administering the Water Management
Act 2000.
(4) A person given a direction under this section must comply with it
as and when required by the direction.Maximum penalty: 10,000 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) or 2,500 penalty units (in any other
case).
10IA Supply of water
A person must not, by means of a reticulated water supply system,
supply any other person with drinking water that is not fit for human
consumption.Maximum penalty: 10,000 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation) and 2,500 penalty units (in any other
case).
10J Protection from liability
(1) The provision of any information or advice concerning drinking
water by the Chief Health Officer exercising any function under section 10B,
10C or 10E in good faith for the purpose of executing this Act does not
subject any of the following to any action, liability, claim or demand:(a) the State,
(b) a Minister of the Crown in right of New South
Wales,
(c) an officer of the Department of Health.
(2) A reference in this section to the exercise by the Chief Health
Officer of a function under this Part includes a reference to a decision by
the Chief Health Officer not to exercise a power conferred by this
Part.
(3) To avoid doubt, it is declared that:(a) the exercise of a function under section 10B (1) or 10E (4) (a)
extends to deciding that a boil water advice is not to be issued in particular
circumstances or at a particular time, and
(b) the exercise of a function under section 10C extends to deciding
that a direction under section 10C (1) should not be
given.
10K Evidentiary provision
A certificate signed by the Minister, the Director-General or the
Chief Health Officer, being a certificate to the effect that the signatory
gave a specified direction to a specified person on a specified day, is
admissible in evidence and is prima facie evidence of the facts stated in
it.
10L Proceedings for offences under Part 2B
(1) Proceedings for an offence under this Part may be dealt with
summarily before the Supreme Court in its summary
jurisdiction.
(2) Proceedings for an offence under this Part may be commenced at any
time within, but not later than, 2 years after the date on which the offence
is alleged to have been committed.
10M Regulations for the purposes of Part 2B
Without limiting the generality of section 82, the regulations may
make provision for or with respect to any of the following:(a) requiring a supplier of drinking water to establish, and adhere
to, a quality assurance program designed to ensure that the drinking water it
supplies is consistently safe to drink,
(b) the tests on water and other substances referred to in section
10G,
(c) the records to be maintained by a supplier of drinking
water.
Part 3 Scheduled medical conditions
Division 1 General precautions
11 Precautions against spread of certain medical
conditions
(1) A person who:(a) suffers from a Category 2, Category 3, Category 4 or Category 5
medical condition, and
(b) is in a public place or other place of public resort (including
any means of public transport), and
(c) fails to take reasonable precautions against spreading the medical
condition,
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months.
(2) It is a defence to a prosecution of a person for an offence under
this section if it is proved that the person was, at the time of commission of
the alleged offence, ignorant of the existence of the medical condition on
which the prosecution is based.
Division 2 Sexually transmissible medical
conditions
12 Provision of information
(1) A medical practitioner who believes on reasonable grounds that a
person receiving attention from the medical practitioner suffers from a
sexually transmissible medical condition must, as soon as practicable, provide
the person with such information concerning the condition as is required by
the regulations.
(2) A medical practitioner who fails to comply with this section is
guilty of an offence unless the court is satisfied that the medical
practitioner knew that the information to which the offence relates had been
supplied to the patient by another medical practitioner.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
13 Sexual intercourse—sexually transmissible medical
condition
(1) A person who knows that he or she suffers from a sexually
transmissible medical condition is guilty of an offence if he or she has
sexual intercourse with another person unless, before the intercourse takes
place, the other person:(a) has been informed of the risk of contracting a sexually
transmissible medical condition from the person with whom intercourse is
proposed, and
(b) has voluntarily agreed to accept the
risk.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) An owner or occupier of a building or place who knowingly permits
another person to:(a) have sexual intercourse at the building or place for the purpose
of prostitution, and
(b) in doing so, commit an offence under subsection
(1),
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) For the purposes of this section, a person is not to be presumed
incapable of having sexual intercourse if the only ground for the presumption
is the age of the person.
(4) In this section, sexual
intercourse means:(a) sexual connection by the introduction into the vagina, anus or
mouth of a person of any part of the penis of another person,
or
(b) cunnilingus.
Division 3 Notification and treatment of certain medical
conditions
14 Medical practitioner to notify certain scheduled medical
conditions
(1) This section applies to a medical practitioner who:(a) attends a person because of a Category 1 medical condition or
believes on reasonable grounds that a person receiving attention from the
medical practitioner suffers from a Category 2 medical condition,
or
(b) as a result of any kind of post-mortem examination, believes on
reasonable grounds that a person has died as a result of such a medical
condition.
(2) A medical practitioner to whom this section applies in relation to
a person must:(a) as soon as practicable, record in accordance with the regulations
particulars concerning the person, and
(b) keep the record for the prescribed period, and
(c) immediately after recording the particulars, send to the
Director-General a certificate that relates to the particulars and is in an
approved form that does not provide for the provision of information that the
medical practitioner is prohibited by section 17 from disclosing,
and
(d) in so far as it is within the medical practitioner’s ability
to do so, provide the Director-General with any information requested by the
Director-General as to the medical condition from which the person is or was
suffering, not including information that the medical practitioner is
prohibited by section 17 from disclosing.
(2A) The medical practitioner is not required to comply with any such
requirements if:(a) the medical practitioner is attending the person as a patient at a
hospital, and
(b) the person is suffering from a notifiable disease,
and
(c) the medical practitioner has been notified that the chief
executive officer of the hospital has, in accordance with section 69, already
provided the Director-General with the relevant information concerning the
person.
In this subsection, notifiable
disease, hospital and chief executive
officer have the same meanings as in section
68.
(3) Except to the extent that the regulations otherwise provide, this
section applies to a person engaged in a prescribed occupation in the same way
as it applies to a medical practitioner.
15 Offence
(1) A person who fails to comply with a requirement of section 14
applicable to the person is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence under this section
if the court is satisfied:(a) that the record alleged not to have been made or kept,
or
(b) that the certificate alleged not to have been
sent,
had been made, kept or sent by another medical practitioner or person to
whom section 14 applies.
16 Notification of test results—Category 3 medical
condition
(1) If:(a) a medical practitioner requests a serological or other prescribed
test for the purpose of detecting whether a person is suffering from a
Category 3 medical condition, and
(b) the test has a positive result,
the person who, in response to the request, certifies the result of the
test to the medical practitioner must, as soon as practicable, send to the
Director-General a report in the approved form that relates to the test but
does not disclose the name or address of the patient if the medical condition
is also a Category 5 medical condition.
(2) A person who is required to send a report under this section and
fails to do so is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) A medical practitioner who requests a person to carry out a test
referred to in subsection (1) (a) must provide the person with sufficient
information to enable the person to comply with subsection
(1).
(4) A medical practitioner who, without reasonable excuse, fails to
comply with subsection (3) within the prescribed period is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(5) On receiving a report under subsection (1) that appears to the
Director-General to be incomplete or contain incorrect information, the
Director-General may require a medical practitioner involved in the treatment
of the person the subject of the report to provide any information required to
complete the report or correct the information.
(6) A medical practitioner who is subject to a requirement made under
subsection (1) may comply with the requirement despite any other Act or
law.
Division 4 Category 5 medical condition
17 Protection of identity
(1) A medical practitioner must not state the name or address of a
patient:(a) in a certificate sent to the Director-General under section 14 in
relation to a Category 5 medical condition, or
(b) except as may be prescribed, in a written or oral communication
made by the medical practitioner for the purpose of arranging a test to find
out whether the patient suffers from a Category 5 medical
condition.
(2) A person who, in the course of providing a service, acquires
information that another person:(a) has been, or is required to be, or is to be, tested for a Category
5 medical condition, or
(b) is, or has been, infected with a Category 5 medical
condition,
must take all reasonable steps to prevent disclosure of the information
to another person.
(3) Information about a person that is of a kind referred to in
subsection (2) may be disclosed:(a) with the consent of the other person, or
(b) in connection with the administration of this Act or another Act,
or
(c) by order of a court or a person authorised by law to examine
witnesses, or
(d) to a person who is involved in the provision of care to, or
treatment or counselling of, the other person if the information is required
in connection with providing such care, treatment or counselling,
or
(e) in such circumstances as may be
prescribed.
(4) A medical practitioner or other person who fails to comply with
the requirements of this section is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
18 District Court may authorise disclosure of name and
address
(1) The Director-General may apply to the District Court, in
accordance with the rules of the District Court, for an order authorising the
service on a medical practitioner of a notice under section 19 requiring
disclosure of a name and address that would otherwise be protected by section
17 from disclosure.
(2) An application under this section may be made in relation to a
medical practitioner only if the Director-General has reasonable grounds for
believing that:(a) the person whose name and address are sought is suffering from a
Category 5 medical condition, and
(b) identification of the person is necessary in order to safeguard
the health of the public.
(3) An application to the District Court under this section is to be
heard and determined in the absence of the public but is to be otherwise heard
and determined in accordance with the rules of the District
Court.
(4) The District Court:(a) is to make an order applied for under this section if satisfied
that there are reasonable grounds for making the order, or
(b) is to dismiss the application if not so
satisfied.
19 Notice by Director-General requiring disclosure of name
and address
(1) If authorised to do so by an order of the District Court made
under section 18, the Director-General may, by written notice served
personally or by post on:(a) a medical practitioner or other person who has sent a certificate
to the Director-General under section 14, or
(b) a medical practitioner who has requested a serological or other
test to which a report under section 16 relates,
require the medical practitioner or other person to provide the
Director-General, within a reasonable time specified in the notice, with the
name and address of the person the subject of the certificate or
report.
(2) A medical practitioner or other person who, without reasonable
excuse, refuses or neglects to comply with the requirement of a notice served
on the medical practitioner or other person under this section is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
Division 5 Death from scheduled medical condition
20 Notification of certain deaths
Immediately after registration of the death of a person apparently
caused by a scheduled medical condition, the Registrar of Births, Deaths and
Marriages is to arrange to have sent to the Director-General, in the approved
form, a notification of the death stating:(a) the name, address and age of the deceased, and
(b) the name of the person who certified the cause of death,
and
(c) such other particulars as may be
prescribed.
Division 6 Public health orders—Categories 4 and
5
21 Definitions
In this Division:appropriate reviewer,
in relation to a public health order, means:
(a) if the order relates to a Category 5 medical condition and there
has been no application to the Tribunal for its continuation—the
Tribunal (as constituted for the purposes of section 25),
or
(b) in any other case—the Tribunal (as constituted for the
purposes of section 26).
authorised medical
practitioner means:
(a) the Chief Health Officer, Department of Health,
or
(b) a medical practitioner authorised by the Director-General to
exercise the functions of an authorised medical practitioner under this
Division.
proceeding includes an inquiry
and an application to the Tribunal relating to a matter arising under this
Division.
22 Power to require medical examination
(1) The Director-General may, by written notice, require a named
person to undergo a medical examination that:(a) is carried out by a medical practitioner chosen by the person,
and
(b) is of a kind described in the notice,
if the Director-General believes on reasonable grounds that the person is
suffering from a Category 4 or Category 5 medical
condition.
(2) If:(a) a notice under this section is served personally on the person to
whom it relates, and
(b) the person fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with the
requirements of the notice,
the person is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
23 Making of public health order
(1) An authorised medical practitioner may make a written public
health order in respect of a person if satisfied on reasonable grounds that
the person:(a) is suffering from a Category 4 or Category 5 medical condition,
and
(b) is behaving in a way that is endangering, or is likely to
endanger, the health of the public because the person is suffering from that
medical condition.
(2) A public health order must:(a) name the person to whom it applies, and
(b) state the circumstances purporting to justify the making of the
order, and
(c) state that, unless the order is earlier varied as to its duration
or is earlier revoked, it expires a specified number of days (not exceeding
28) after its service on the person, and
(d) comply with subsection (3).
(3) A public health order must require the person to whom it applies
to do any one or more of the following:(a) refrain from specified conduct,
(b) undergo specified treatment,
(c) undergo counselling by a specified person or by one or more
persons belonging to a specified class of persons,
(d) submit to the supervision of a specified person or one or more
persons belonging to a specified class of persons,
(e) undergo specified treatment and be detained at a specified place
while undergoing the treatment,
(f) if the order is based on a Category 5 medical condition—be
detained at a specified place while the order is in
force.
(3A) In making a public health order, the authorised medical
practitioner must take into account:(a) such guidelines relating to public health orders as may be
approved by the Director-General from time to time, and
(b) the principle that any requirement restricting the liberty of the
person to whom the order applies should be imposed only if it is the only
effective way to ensure that the health of the public is not endangered or
likely to be endangered.
(4) A public health order may include provisions ancillary to, or
consequential upon, the matters required to be included in the
order.
(5) A public health order does not take effect until it is served
personally on the person to whom it applies.
24 Duration of public health order
(1) A public health order that relates to a Category 5 medical
condition ceases to have any effect if:(a) the person subject to the order is not, within 3 business days
after service on the person of the order, also served with a copy of an
application made to the Tribunal for confirmation of the order under section
25, or
(b) such an application is made and the Tribunal revokes the order
under section 25, or
(c) the order expires before it is confirmed or revoked by the
Tribunal under section 25, or
(d) the order expires before or after an application to continue the
order is made to the Tribunal under section 26.
(2) In this section, business days means
successive days excluding any Saturday, Sunday and public
holidays.
25 Tribunal to review certain public health orders
(1) An application may be made to the Tribunal for confirmation of a
public health order based on a Category 5 medical
condition.
(2) The Tribunal is, as soon as practicable, to inquire into the
circumstances surrounding the making of the order and:(a) if satisfied that the making of the order was justified—is
to confirm the order or vary the order and confirm it as varied,
or
(b) if not so satisfied—is to revoke the
order.
(3) The Tribunal may vary the order only by:(a) adding a requirement that could have been included in the order
when made, or
(b) substituting any such requirement for any one or more of them
already included in the order.
(4) The Tribunal may, from time to time, adjourn an inquiry under this
section for not more than 7 days.
(5) For the purposes of an inquiry under this section, the Tribunal
may:(a) obtain the assistance of any person having medical or other
qualifications relevant to the subject-matter of the inquiry,
and
(b) take into account a certificate given by such a
person.
(6) A decision of the Tribunal made in proceedings determining an
application under this section is an appealable decision for the purposes of
Part 1 of Chapter 7 of the Administrative
Decisions Tribunal Act 1997.
26 Tribunal may continue public health order
(1) An authorised medical practitioner may, before the expiration of a
public health order, apply to the Tribunal for continuation of an order
if:(a) the order is based on a Category 4 medical condition,
or
(b) the order is based on a Category 5 medical condition and has been
confirmed by the Tribunal under section 25.
(2) An application for continuation of a public health order may be
made under this section only if the applicant is satisfied, on reasonable
grounds, that the person to whom the order relates would, if not subject to
such an order, continue to endanger the health of the public as a consequence
of suffering from a Category 4 or Category 5 medical
condition.
(3) If continuation of a public health order is applied for under this
section and the person subject to the order notifies the Tribunal that
continuation of the order is not opposed, the Tribunal may, without inquiry,
continue the order for a period not exceeding 6
months.
(4) Unless the order is continued under subsection (3), the Tribunal
is to make such inquiries as it thinks fit in relation to the application and
may:(a) continue the order, with or without variation, for a period not
exceeding 6 months, or
(b) refuse to continue the order, or
(c) revoke the order.
(5) The Tribunal may vary the order only by:(a) omitting a requirement included in the order,
or
(b) adding a requirement that could have been included in the order
when made, or
(c) substituting any such requirement for any one or more of them
already included in the order.
(6) For the purposes of an inquiry under this section, the Tribunal
may:(a) obtain the assistance of any person having medical or other
qualifications relevant to the subject-matter of the inquiry,
and
(b) take into account a certificate given by such a
person.
27 Conditions applicable if person detained
(1) A person detained under the authority of a public health order may
be so detained subject to such conditions with respect to the person’s
security as the medical practitioner making the order considers necessary in
the interests of the health of the public and specifies in the
order.
(2) A person detained under the authority of a public health order
may, for any special reason accepted by an authorised medical practitioner, be
permitted to leave the place of detention, but only under the constant
personal supervision of a person, or any one of a number of persons, nominated
by the medical practitioner.
(3) A person who is detained under a public health order and:(a) is in breach of a condition specified in the order,
or
(b) evades supervision to which he or she is subject under this
section,
is to be taken to have contravened the public health
order.
28 Offence to contravene public health order
(1) If the person to whom a public health order applies contravenes
the order, the person is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months, or
both.
(2) Proceedings for an offence under this section may be brought only
by the Director-General or a police officer.
(3) Prosecution for an offence under this section does not preclude
action under section 30 in respect of the contravention on which the
prosecution is based.
29 Apprehension of person who contravenes public health
order
(1) A certificate by an authorised medical practitioner to the effect
that a named person is contravening a public health order is a sufficient
ground for the issue to a police officer of a warrant to apprehend the person
and detain the person in custody pending an inquiry under section
30.
(2) A police officer who is provided with such a certificate is, as
soon as practicable, to:(a) obtain a warrant for which the certificate is a ground,
and
(b) apprehend the person named in the certificate,
and
(c) detain the person in custody pending an inquiry under section
30.
(3) Section 27 applies in relation to detention following apprehension
under this section in the same way as it would apply if the certificate that
led to the apprehension had been a public health
order.
30 Action following apprehension or surrender
(1) If a person alleged to have contravened a public health
order:(a) is apprehended and brought before the appropriate reviewer,
or
(b) appears voluntarily before the appropriate
reviewer,
the reviewer is to inquire into the
allegation.
(2) If, after inquiry, the appropriate reviewer is not satisfied that
the person has contravened a public health order, it is to order that the
person be discharged.
(3) If, after inquiry, the appropriate reviewer is satisfied that a
person has contravened a public health order, it may confirm the public health
order or:(a) vary the public health order by adding a requirement, direction or
other provision that could have been included in the order when made,
or
(b) vary the public health order by substituting any such requirement,
direction or other provision for any one or more of them already included in
the order, or
(c) caution the person and take no further action in the
matter.
(4) A person may be dealt with under this section in respect of an
alleged contravention of a public health order whether or not the person has
been charged under section 28 for an offence in relation to the same
contravention.
31 Revocation of public health order by authorised medical
practitioner
If an authorised medical practitioner considers that the person to
whom a public health order applies is no longer endangering, or likely to
endanger, the health of the public, the medical practitioner is to revoke the
order and immediately give written notice of the revocation to:(a) the person to whom the order applied, and
(b) the appropriate reviewer.
32 Restriction on making of further public health
order
(1) This section applies to a person who was the subject of a public
health order if:(a) the order was revoked by the Tribunal under section 25 or 26, by
an authorised medical practitioner under section 31 or on an appeal against
the order, or
(b) the Tribunal has refused under section 26 to continue the
order.
(2) A further public health order may be made in respect of a person
to whom this section applies only if the authorised medical practitioner
proposing to make the further order is satisfied on reasonable grounds that,
since the earlier order ceased to have effect, there has been a change in the
person’s health or behaviour which increases the risk of endangering the
health of the public.
33 Apprehension of escapee
(1) If a person detained under a public health order or following
apprehension under section 29 escapes from the place of detention, he or she
may be apprehended at any time by:(a) the person for the time being in charge of the place from which
the person escaped, or
(b) an authorised medical practitioner, or
(c) a police officer, or
(d) any person assisting a person referred to in paragraphs
(a)–(c).
(2) On being apprehended, the escapee must be returned to the place
from which he or she escaped.
34 Unlawful release from detention
(1) A person who, without lawful authority, releases, or attempts to
release:(a) a person detained under a public health order or following
apprehension under section 29 or 33, or
(b) a person being conveyed to a place at which he or she is to be so
detained,
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months, or
both.
(2) It is a defence to a prosecution for:(a) an offence under this section, or
(b) aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring the escape of a person
detained under a public health order or following apprehension under section
29 or 33,
if it is proved that the action of the defendant did not endanger the
health of the public and that the defendant knew this to be
so.
35 Restrictions on publication
(1) The court in which proceedings under this Division have been
instituted or are being heard may make orders having the effect of prohibiting
or restricting the publication of matters relating to the proceedings or to a
person in respect of whom the proceedings have been
instituted.
(2) The orders that a court may make under this section include orders
prohibiting or restricting publication of any one or more of the
following:(a) any report that relates to the proceedings,
(b) the identity of the person in respect of whom the proceedings have
been instituted,
(c) any information from which the identity of that person could be
deduced,
(d) any information from which could be deduced the identity of a
person in respect of whom a public health order is, or at any time was, sought
or made, whether or not in the proceedings.
(3) An order under this section may be made by the court of its own
motion or on the application of a party to the
proceedings.
(4) If an application under this section is made by a party to the
proceedings, the onus is on the other party to show cause why the application
should be refused.
(5) An order made under this section does not operate to prevent
publication of a report of the proceedings if:(a) the report is published in a genuine volume of law reports, a
legal journal or any other publication intended to be read mainly by
Australian lawyers, Magistrates and Judges, and
(b) the person in respect of whom the proceedings were instituted, or
in respect of whom a public health order is sought or made, is not identified
in the report.
(6) A person who contravenes an order in force under this section
(whether aware of the order or not) is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty:
(a) in the case of a corporation—100 penalty units,
or
(b) in any other case—50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6
months, or both.
(7) This section does not prevent punishment, as a contempt, of a
contravention of an order made in proceedings before a court but, in respect
of such a contravention, a person may not be dealt with both for a contempt of
the court and by prosecution for an offence.
(8) In this section:publish means:
(a) publish in a newspaper, magazine or other periodical publication,
or
(b) publish by radio or television transmission,
or
(c) include in a cinematographic film or videotape that is, or is to
be, available to the public, or
(d) include in a book or sound recording that is, or is to be,
available to the public, or
(e) make known to the public in any other manner or by any other
means.
36 Inspection of medical records
(1) A person to whom a public health order applies, or the authorised
agent of such a person, is, unless the appropriate reviewer otherwise directs,
entitled to inspect, and make copies of, medical records relating to the
person that are kept by another person.
(2) If the medical records are not kept in a readable form, the person
in charge of the records is to provide a readable copy of
them.
Division 7 Procedural matters
37 Proceedings—Divisions 2 and 3
Proceedings for offences under Divisions 2 and 3 are to be heard
and determined in the absence of the public.
38 Proceedings—Division 6
Proceedings under Division 6 before a court:(a) are to be open to the public unless an objection is made by or on
behalf of a party to the proceedings and is upheld by the court,
or
(b) are to be held in closed court if such an objection is made and
upheld.
39 Representation in proceedings under Division 6
A party to proceedings under Division 6 before a court may be
represented by an Australian legal practitioner or, with the leave of the
court, by a person other than an Australian legal
practitioner.
Division 8 Other applications to Administrative Decisions
Tribunal
40 Applications to Tribunal for review of action or direction
of Minister
An application may be made to the Tribunal for a review of any of
the following decisions:(a) any action taken by the Minister under section 5 other than the
giving of a direction by an order published under that section,
or
(b) any direction given by an order so
published.
41 Applications to Tribunal for review of public health order
relating to Category 4 medical condition
An application may be made to the Tribunal for a review of a
public health order that is based on a Category 4 medical
condition.
42 (Repealed)
Part 3A Control of vaccine preventable diseases
42A Definitions
In this Part:child means a
child of a class (such as children of a specified age group) prescribed by the
regulations.
child at
risk, in relation to a vaccine preventable disease, means a child
enrolled at a school or child care facility for whom no immunisation
certificate or evidence of immunisation has been lodged or produced to the
principal of the school or director of the facility which shows that the child
has been immunised against, or has acquired immunity by infection from, the
disease.
child care
facility means:
(a) a child care service to which Division 1 of Part 3 of the Children (Care and Protection) Act
1987 applies, or
(b) a service or facility of a class declared by the regulations to be
a child care facility for the purposes of this
Part.
director of a
child care facility means the person in charge of the facility.
immunisation means the process
of administering to a person, either orally or parenterally, a substance
registered as a vaccine in the part of the Australian Register of Therapeutic
Goods maintained under section 17 of the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 of the
Commonwealth relating to registered goods.
immunisation
certificate means a certificate in the approved form in which a
medical practitioner, or a person of a class specified by the
Director-General, certifies the immunisation status of a child, and includes a
photocopy or a duplicate of such a certificate.
immunisation
status of a child means whether or not the child has been immunised
against, or has acquired immunity by infection from, all or specified vaccine
preventable diseases.
parent of a child
includes a guardian or other person having the care or custody of the
child.
school
means:
(a) a government school established under the Education Reform Act 1990,
or
(b) a non-government school registered under that
Act.
vaccine
preventable disease means measles, diphtheria, whooping cough,
poliomyelitis, tetanus, mumps, rubella or any other disease specified in the
regulations as a vaccine preventable disease for the purposes of this
Part.
42B Responsibilities of principals of schools with respect to
immunisation
(1) When a child is being enrolled at a school, the principal of the
school must request a parent of the child to lodge with the principal an
immunisation certificate for the child, unless satisfied that the certificate
can be obtained under subsection (2).
(2) If an immunisation certificate has been lodged with the principal
of a school in respect of a child and the child has subsequently become
enrolled at another school, the principal must, on being requested to do so by
a parent of the child or the principal of the other school, forward the
certificate to the principal of the other school.
(3) The principal of a school must record in the approved manner the
immunisation status of each child enrolled at the school as indicated by any
immunisation certificate lodged with the principal in respect of the
child.
(4) For the purposes of recording the immunisation status of a child
for whom no immunisation certificate has been lodged with a principal, the
child is taken not to have been immunised against any of the vaccine
preventable diseases.
(5) A principal must retain an immunisation certificate lodged with
the principal in safe custody for such period as may be prescribed by the
regulations.
(6) The medical officer of health for a medical district may, at any
reasonable time:(a) enter any school located in the district, and
(b) request the principal of the school to produce the immunisation
certificates and records required by this section to be kept by the
principal.
A principal must comply with such a
request.
42C Responsibilities of directors of child care facilities
with respect to immunisation
(1) When a child is being enrolled at a child care facility, and on
such subsequent occasions as may be prescribed by the regulations, the
director of the facility must request a parent of the child to produce to the
director evidence as to the child’s immunisation status, unless
satisfied that the evidence can be obtained under subsection (2). The evidence
to be produced under this subsection must be in an approved
form.
(2) If the director of a child care facility has recorded in the
register under this section the immunisation status of the child and the child
has subsequently become enrolled at another child care facility, the director
must, on being requested to do so by a parent of the child or the director of
the other child care facility, provide that director with a copy of the entry
in the register relating to the immunisation status of the
child.
(3) The director of a child care facility must record in a register,
kept in the approved manner, the immunisation status of each child enrolled at
the facility as indicated by evidence produced in an approved form to the
director in respect of the child.
(4) For the purposes of recording the immunisation status of a child
for whom no evidence is produced to the director in an approved form, the
child is taken not to have been immunised against any of the vaccine
preventable diseases.
(5) The director of a child care facility must retain an entry in the
register for such period as may be prescribed by the
regulations.
(6) The medical officer of health for a medical district may, at any
reasonable time:(a) enter any child care facility located in the district,
and
(b) request the director of the facility to produce the register
required by this section.
A director must comply with such a
request.
42D Duties of principals and directors when there is an
outbreak of a vaccine preventable disease
(1) The principal of a school, or the director of a child care
facility, must, on becoming aware that a child enrolled at the school or
facility is suffering from a vaccine preventable disease, inform the medical
officer of health for the medical district where the school or facility is
located that the child is suffering from the
disease.
(2) On being informed that a child is suffering from a vaccine
preventable disease, a medical officer of health may, for the purpose of
preventing the spread of the disease, direct the principal of the school, or
the director of the child care facility, at which the child is enrolled to do
either or both of the following:(a) to send or deliver to the parent of the child, and of every child
at risk who is enrolled at the school or facility, a notice to the effect
that, unless the requirements specified in the notice are complied with in
respect of that parent’s child within the period so specified, that
child is to be excluded from the school or facility for the duration of the
outbreak of the disease (as determined by that medical
officer),
(b) to take such other action with respect to the child suffering from
the disease and the children at risk as may be specified in the
direction.
(3) In giving a direction under subsection (2), a medical officer of
health must comply with such guidelines as may be issued from time to time by
the Director-General.
(4) On receiving a direction under subsection (2), the principal or
director must comply with the direction.
(5) A principal who has sent or delivered a notice referred to in
subsection (2) (a) must ensure that the child to whom the notice relates is
excluded from the school or child care facility concerned for the duration of
the outbreak of the disease (as determined by the medical officer of health
concerned), unless the requirements specified in the notice have been complied
with within the period so specified.
(6) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply when the school or child care
facility is closed for a public holiday or vacation, unless the school or
facility would reopen before the end of the duration of the outbreak of the
disease (as determined by the medical officer of health
concerned).
(7) A member of the staff of a school or child care facility must not,
except as provided by this section, subject a child who attends or is seeking
to attend the school or facility to any detriment because of the child’s
immunisation status.
Part 3B Pap Test Register
Division 1 Preliminary
42E Definitions
In this Part:cervical
cancer means a malignant growth of human tissue in the cervix of the
uterus that is likely to spread to tissue beyond its site of
origin.
cervical
cancer test means a test that is carried out to determine whether or
not a woman has cervical cancer or any of its precursors, and that:
(a) consists of a pathological examination of a specimen of any kind
taken from the woman, or
(b) is a test, or a test of a class, prescribed by the regulations for
the purposes of this paragraph.
health
practitioner means a person who is:
(a) a medical practitioner, or
(b) a registered nurse within the meaning of the Nurses and Midwives Act 1991, or a
registered midwife within the meaning of that Act, or
(c) a person, or a person of a class, prescribed by the regulations
for the purposes of this paragraph.
identifying
particulars of a woman means the woman’s:
(a) full name (and any previous name), and
(b) residential or postal address.
pathology request
form means a form submitted to a pathology laboratory by or on
behalf of a health practitioner requesting the laboratory to carry out a
pathological examination of a specimen.
Register
means the New South Wales Pap Test Register referred to in section
42F.
Division 2 New South Wales Pap Test Register
42F New South Wales Pap Test Register
(1) The Director-General is to cause to be compiled and maintained a
Register, to be known as the New South Wales Pap Test
Register.
(2) The Director-General may enter into any agreement or arrangement
for any other person to maintain the Register.
42G Object of establishing Register
The object of establishing the Register is to reduce the incidence
of, and mortality from, preventable cervical cancer by using the Register for
the purposes specified in section 42I.
42H Contents of Register
(1) The Register is to contain the following information in relation
to a cervical cancer test:(a) the identifying particulars of the woman who had the
test,
(b) her date of birth,
(c) the date of the test,
(d) the result of the test,
(e) an indication of whether the test was carried out:(i) because the woman had symptoms that warranted investigation,
or
(ii) as a routine measure only,
(f) the identification number of the test,
(g) if the test consisted of a pathological examination of a specimen
taken from the woman:(i) the name, address and identification code of the health
practitioner by or on whose behalf the relevant pathology request form was
submitted, and
(ii) the identification code of the laboratory that examined the
specimen,
(h) if the test was a test, or a test of a class, prescribed by the
regulations:(i) the name, address and identification code of the health
practitioner who carried out the test, and
(ii) such clinical information as the regulations may
prescribe.
(2) In this section:identification
code, in relation to a health practitioner or laboratory, means a
code used to identify the health practitioner or laboratory for the purposes
of the Register.
identification
number, in relation to a test, means the number allocated uniquely
to the test by:
(a) the laboratory that carried out the test (in the case of a test
consisting of a pathological examination of a specimen taken from a woman),
or
(b) the health practitioner (in any other
case).
42I Use of information in Register
(1) The information in the Register is to be used for the following
purposes:(a) to remind any woman who does not have a further cervical cancer
test (or other appropriate investigation or treatment) within a reasonable
time after a cervical cancer test that a further test (or investigation or
treatment) is recommended,
(b) to provide a record of test results that links each woman tested
with her health practitioner and any laboratory that produces her test
results,
(c) to monitor rates and patterns of cervical cancer tests to assist
in the planning and evaluation of test programs,
(d) to provide information (being information that does not include
any woman’s identifying particulars):(i) to the public—so as to increase public awareness of the
Register and its objects, and
(ii) to health practitioners and laboratories—to assist them to
monitor their quality control procedures in relation to cervical cancer tests,
and
(iii) to the Department of Health, and
(iv) to the Commonwealth,
(e) to maintain a database (being a database that does not contain any
woman’s identifying particulars) for use in research into the prevention
and treatment of cervical cancer.
(2) Any person acting for the purposes of this Division does not, if
acting in good faith, incur any liability by reason of any notification or
advice to a woman, or any failure to notify or advise a woman, in relation to
any matter included in or otherwise concerning the
Register.
(3) In this section, test results means
the results of a cervical cancer test.
42J Disclosure of identifying particulars in conjunction with
test result
(1) A person may disclose, in conjunction with the result of a
cervical cancer test, the identifying particulars of the woman who had the
test only:(a) to the woman concerned, or
(b) with the written consent of the woman, or
(c) to the woman’s health practitioner, or
(d) to the person in charge of a laboratory that is, or has previously
been, engaged on the woman’s behalf to make a pathological examination
of a specimen taken from her, or
(e) for the purposes of section 42I (1) (a) or (b),
or
(f) if permitted or required to do so under the terms of an order of a
court or the provisions of an Act, or
(g) in accordance with the regulations.
(2) The regulations may prescribe either or both of the
following:(a) the persons, or class of persons, to whom a woman’s
identifying particulars may be disclosed in conjunction with the results of
the woman’s cervical cancer test,
(b) the circumstances in which that disclosure may be
made.
42K Provision of information for inclusion in
Register
(1) The person in charge of a laboratory that carries out a cervical
cancer test must provide a report relating to the test in accordance with this
section.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) A person in charge of a laboratory is not guilty of an offence
under this section by reason only that the report concerned did not include
information that it was not in the power of the laboratory to
provide.
(3) A health practitioner who carries out a test, or a test of a
class, prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the
definition of cervical cancer
test in section 42E, must provide a report relating to the test in
accordance with this section.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(4) A health practitioner who takes a specimen from a woman for the
purposes of a cervical cancer test is to ensure that the relevant pathology
request form contains as much of the information required by this section to
be included in a report from a laboratory as it is in the power of the health
practitioner to provide.
(5) A report referred to in this section:(a) is to be provided to the Director-General (or, if the
Director-General has entered into an agreement or arrangement with another
person under section 42F (2) and the person in charge of the laboratory or the
health practitioner concerned has been notified accordingly, to that other
person), and
(b) is to be provided within 30 days after the completion of the test,
and
(c) is to contain, in relation to the test, the information referred
to in section 42H, and
(d) is to be in a form approved by the
Director-General.
(6) This section is subject to section 42O.
Division 3 Right to anonymity in Register
42L Application of Division
This Division has effect despite section
42H.
42M Woman may elect not to be identified in
Register
A woman who has a cervical cancer test may elect to have her
identifying particulars withheld from the Register by advising the health
practitioner carrying out, or taking the specimen for the purposes of, the
test that she does not want to be identified in the
Register.
42N Removal of identifying particulars from
Register
(1) A woman may at any time request the Director-General, in writing,
to remove her identifying particulars from the
Register.
(2) The Director-General is to cause any such request to be complied
with as soon as practicable after receiving it.
42O Withholding of identifying particulars
(1) If a woman elects to have her identifying particulars withheld
from the Register, the health practitioner to whom she makes the
election:(a) must note any relevant pathology request form accordingly,
and
(b) must not provide those particulars to any person for the purpose
of their inclusion in the Register.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) A person in charge of a laboratory that receives a pathology
request form noted as referred to in subsection (1) must ensure that the
laboratory does not provide the identifying particulars of the woman to whom
the form relates to any person for the purpose of their inclusion in the
Register.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(3) Any person who has reason to believe that a woman has elected to
have her identifying particulars withheld from the Register is not to include
those particulars in the Register.
42P Health practitioner to provide information about
Register
(1) A health practitioner who carries out a cervical cancer test, or
takes a specimen from a woman for the purpose of such a test, is, before
carrying out the test or taking the specimen, to provide the woman concerned
with details of:(a) the object of the Register, and
(b) the information that is recorded in the Register,
and
(c) the purposes for which that information may be used,
and
(d) the way in which the confidentiality of the Register is
protected.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the health practitioner’s
records indicate that the woman has previously been provided with details of
the Register. In that case, however, the health practitioner is to remind the
woman of her right to have her identifying particulars removed from the
Register.
(3) If the health practitioner’s records do not indicate that
the woman has previously been provided with details of the Register, the
health practitioner is also to inform the woman:(a) that she may elect to have her identifying particulars withheld
from the Register, and
(b) that if she does not so elect, she may have those particulars
removed from the Register at any time after they are recorded in
it.
Part 4 Microbial control
43 Purpose of Part 4
(1) The purpose of this Part is to regulate:(a) the installation on premises of certain kinds of systems,
and
(b) the operation and maintenance of those kinds of systems installed
on premises, whether the installation took place before, or takes place after,
the commencement of this Part,
in order to prevent or inhibit the growth in the systems of
micro-organisms that are liable to cause Legionnaires’ disease and other
diseases.
(2) The systems comprise:(a) air-handling systems, and
(b) evaporative cooling systems, and
(c) hot-water systems, and
(d) humidifying systems, and
(e) warm-water systems, and
(f) water-cooling systems,
and their associated equipment and fittings.
44 Definitions
In this Part:air-handling
system means a system designed for the purpose of directing air in a
positive and controlled manner to and from specific enclosures by means of
air-handling plant, ducts, plenums, air-distribution devices and automatic
controls.
authorised
officer, in relation to any premises, means:
(a) an environmental health officer employed by the local authority
for the area in which the premises are situated, or
(b) an environmental health officer of the Department of Health,
or
(c) a person authorised by the Minister or the Director-General to
exercise the powers conferred by this Part on an authorised
officer.
cooling-tower means:
(a) a device for lowering the temperature of water or other liquid by
evaporative cooling, or
(b) an evaporative condenser which incorporates a device containing a
refrigerant or heat exchanger.
evaporative
cooling system means a system that effects a reduction of dry bulb
temperature by evaporating water into the air being treated.
hot water
system means a system designed to heat and deliver water at a
temperature of at least 60°C at each outlet point.
humidifying
system means a system for adding moisture to air in order to raise
its humidity.
install includes
construct.
maintain includes
repair, inspect, carry out preventive servicing and clean.
prescribed
installation requirements means requirements specified in the
regulations with respect to the design and installation of a regulated
system.
prescribed maintenance
requirements means requirements specified in the regulations with
respect to the maintenance of a regulated system.
prescribed operating
requirements means requirements specified in the regulations with
respect to the operation of a regulated system.
regulated
premises means any premises other than premises declared by the
regulations not to be regulated premises for the purposes of this
Part.
regulated
system means:
(a) a system referred to in section 43, or
(b) any system that is for the treatment of air or water and is
declared by the regulations to be a regulated system for the purposes of this
Part.
warm-water
system means a system designed to heat and deliver water at a
temperature of less than 60°C at each outlet point.
water-cooling
system means a cooling tower and its associated equipment and pipe
work.
45 Installation of system
(1) The installation on regulated premises of a regulated system must
be done in accordance with the prescribed installation
requirements.
(2) If a regulated system is installed in contravention of this
section, the installer of the system is guilty of an
offence.
(3) If a regulated system is installed on regulated premises in
contravention of this section, the occupier of the premises at the time of
installation of the system is guilty of an offence unless the court is
satisfied that the installation was carried out by a person or persons who
might reasonably be expected to be competent to do
so.
46 Operation and maintenance of system
(1) If the occupier of regulated premises fails, while such an
occupier, to ensure that the prescribed operating requirements, or the
prescribed maintenance requirements, are complied with in relation to a
regulated system installed on the premises, the occupier is guilty of an
offence.
(2) It is a defence to proceedings for an offence under this section
if the court is satisfied that:(a) the occupier engaged a person to carry out the requirements to
which the proceedings relate, and
(b) the person so engaged might reasonably have been expected to be
competent to carry out the requirements.
(3) If a contractor:(a) is engaged by the occupier of regulated premises to operate a
regulated system, and
(b) fails to carry out the prescribed operating requirements for the
system,
the contractor is guilty of an offence.
(4) If a contractor:(a) is engaged by the occupier of regulated premises to maintain a
regulated system, and
(b) fails to carry out the prescribed maintenance requirements for the
system,
the contractor is guilty of an offence.
(5) This section applies to a regulated system whether installed
before or after the commencement of this Part.
47 Powers of authorised officers
(1) An authorised officer who believes on reasonable grounds that a
regulated system has been, or is being, installed on any regulated premises
may:(a) enter the premises at any reasonable time in order to find out
whether or not a system on the premises is a regulated system,
and
(b) inspect and test any system on the premises,
and
(c) investigate whether or not the prescribed operating requirements,
and the prescribed maintenance requirements, have been complied with in
relation to any regulated system on the premises, and
(d) require the production of, and inspect, any records required by
the regulations to be kept in relation to the operation and maintenance of any
regulated system on the premises.
(2) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to the exercise
of the powers conferred by this section.
48 Directions to carry out maintenance
requirements
(1) The Director-General, or a local authority, may serve on the
occupier of regulated premises in which a regulated system is installed a
notice:(a) directing that a specified prescribed maintenance requirement for
the system be complied with before a date stated in the notice,
and
(b) if appropriate, directing that the system not be operated until
the Director-General, or the local authority, is satisfied that the
requirement has been complied with.
(2) A notice under this section may be served:(a) only if the Director-General, or the local authority, believes on
reasonable grounds that the requirement to which the notice relates is not
being, or has not been, complied with, and
(b) in the case of a local authority, only if the premises are within
the area for which it is the local authority.
(3) Service of a notice under this section does not preclude
proceedings for an offence under section 46.
49 Failure to comply with directions
(1) If the directions given in a notice served under section 48 are
not complied with:(a) the Director-General, if the notice was served by the
Director-General, or
(b) the local authority that served the
notice,
may make arrangements for the doing of such work as may be necessary in
order to comply with the requirements of the notice other than the time
required for compliance.
(2) An employee assigned, or contractor engaged, by the
Director-General or a local authority to do any work on regulated premises in
accordance with those arrangements may, at any reasonable time, enter the
premises and do the work or have it done.
(3) An amount equal to the cost of carrying out work in accordance
with those arrangements may be recovered from the occupier of the
premises:(a) as a debt due to the Crown if the arrangements were made by the
Director-General, or
(b) as a debt due to the local authority if the arrangements were made
by the local authority.
(4) An occupier of regulated premises is guilty of an offence if a
regulated system on the premises is operated in contravention of a direction
given in a notice served on the occupier under this
section.
(5) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to the exercise
of the powers of entry on premises conferred by this
section.
50 Proceedings for offences under Part 4
(1) Proceedings for an offence under this Part are to be disposed of
summarily either:(a) before the Local Court, or
(b) before the Supreme Court in its summary
jurisdiction.
(2) A person convicted by the Local Court of an offence under this
Part is liable to a penalty not exceeding 100 penalty units or imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 12 months, or both.
(3) A person convicted by the Supreme Court of an offence under this
Part is liable to a penalty not exceeding 500 penalty units or imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 2 years, or both.
(4) Proceedings for an offence under this Part may be commenced at any
time within, but not later than, 2 years after the time at which the offence
is alleged to have been committed.
Part 5 General health matters
51 Skin penetration procedures—power of environmental
health officers to enter and inspect premises
(1) An environmental health officer who believes on reasonable grounds
that premises are used for the carrying on of skin penetration procedures may
enter the premises and do any one or more of the following on those
premises:(a) inspect the premises,
(b) make inquiries of any person found on the
premises,
(c) examine, inspect or test any apparatus, equipment or
works,
(d) take and remove samples of any substance or other
thing,
(e) require the samples referred to in paragraph (d) to be taken and
given to the environmental health officer or another person or to the
Director-General,
(f) take such photographs, films and audio, video and other recordings
as the environmental health officer considers necessary,
(g) require records to be produced for inspection,
(h) examine, inspect and copy any records,
(i) make such other examinations, inquiries and tests as the
environmental health officer considers necessary.
(2) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to the exercise
of powers conferred by this section.
(3) In this section:skin
penetration procedure means any of the following procedures:
(a) acupuncture,
(b) tattooing,
(c) ear piercing,
(d) hair removal,
(e) any other procedure (whether medical or not) that involves skin
penetration,
(f) any other procedure prescribed by the
regulations,
but does not include:(g) a procedure carried out in the practice of medicine or dentistry
by:(i) a medical practitioner registered under the Medical Practice Act 1992,
or
(ii) a dentist registered under the Dentists Act 1989,
or
(iii) a person acting under the direction or supervision of such a
medical practitioner or dentist, or
(h) any other procedure prescribed by the
regulations.
52 Nursing requirements for nursing homes
(1) A person who operates a nursing home must:(a) ensure that a registered nurse is on duty in the nursing home at
all times, and
(b) ensure that a registered nurse is appointed as a director of
nursing of the nursing home, and
(c) ensure that any vacancy in the position of director of nursing of
the nursing home is filled within 7 days.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units.
(2) The regulations may prescribe the minimum necessary qualifications
for a registered nurse to be appointed as a director of nursing at a nursing
home.
(3) In this section:director of
nursing of a nursing home means the registered nurse responsible for
care of the residents of the nursing home.
registered
nurse has the same meaning as in the Nurses and Midwives Act
1991.
Part 6
53–61P(Repealed)
Part 7 Administration
Division 1 Medical officers of health
62 Nomination of medical officers of health
(1) The Governor may nominate a medical practitioner to be a medical
officer of health at such remuneration, if any, as is determined by the
Governor.
(2) Part 2 of the Public Sector
Management Act 1988 does not apply to the nomination of a
medical officer of health and a medical officer of health is not subject to
that Part of that Act.
(3) The regulations may confer or impose functions on a medical
officer of health.
62A Appointment of acting medical officers of
health
(1) The Director-General:(a) may, from time to time, appoint a medical practitioner to act as a
medical officer of health during the illness or absence of the officer or
while there is a vacancy in the office of such an officer,
and
(b) may, at any time, terminate the
appointment.
(2) A medical practitioner has, while acting as a medical officer of
health, all the functions of the officer and is to be regarded as the
officer.
63 Medical districts
(1) The Governor may, by order published in the Gazette:(a) describe a medical district (which may include a specified river,
lake or harbour, or any specified coastal water or other water),
and
(b) nominate a specified medical practitioner as the medical officer
of health for the medical district on and from a date stated in the
order.
(2) An order under this section may describe a group of medical
districts and nominate the same medical practitioner as the medical officer of
health for each of them.
(3) The medical officer of health nominated for a medical district may
exercise his or her functions under this Act only:(a) within that medical district, or
(b) with the authority of the Director-General, within any other
medical district during the absence, or a vacancy in the office, of its
medical officer of health.
(4) With the authority of the Director-General, a medical practitioner
who is an officer of the Department of Health and has the prescribed
qualifications may, in any medical district, exercise any of the functions of
the medical officer of health for the medical
district.
64 Inspection of, and extracts from, certain
registers
(1) A medical officer of health (or any person authorised by a medical
officer of health) may, at any reasonable time, inspect the registers kept
under the Births, Deaths and Marriages
Registration Act 1995.
(2) With the authority of the Director-General, an officer of the
Department of Health may, at any reasonable time, inspect those
registers.
(3) The Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages is to make such
arrangements as may be necessary for an extract from, or a copy of an entry
in, a register to be supplied if required by a medical officer of health (or
any person authorised by a medical officer of health), or an officer of the
Department of Health, entitled under this section to inspect the
register.
65 Inspection of premises
(1) For the purpose of giving effect to this Act, a medical officer of
health (or any person authorised by a medical officer of health) may, at any
reasonable time, enter and inspect any premises and may make inquiries of any
person found on the premises.
(2) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to any entry on
premises for the purposes of this section and to any inspection or other
action that is authorised by this section.
66 Reports by medical officers of health
(1) If:(a) a matter affecting the health of the public in a medical district
comes to the notice of the medical officer of health for the district,
or
(b) the Director-General requests the medical officer of health for a
medical district to provide a report on a specified matter affecting the
health of the public in the district,
the medical officer of health is to provide the Director-General with a
report on the matter as soon as possible.
(2) If a matter in respect of which a medical officer of health
provides a report under this section is a matter in respect of which a local
authority may, or must, exercise a function, the medical officer of health is
to send a copy of the report to the local
authority.
67 Exercise by medical officer of health of functions of
environmental health officer
A medical officer of health (or any person authorised by a medical
officer of health) may exercise any functions of an environmental health
officer employed by a local authority.
Division 2 Notifications by hospitals
68 Definitions
In this Division:chief
executive officer, in relation to a hospital, means the person
responsible for the day to day administration of the affairs of the
hospital.
hospital
means:
(a) a public hospital within the meaning of the Health Services Act 1997,
or
(b) (Repealed)
(c) a hospital, or a health care agency, within the meaning of the
Mental Health Act 1990,
or
(d) an establishment within the meaning of the Private Hospitals and Day Procedure Centres Act
1988, or
(e) a nursing home, or
(f) any other institution prescribed by the regulations as a hospital
for the purposes of this Division.
notifiable
disease means a medical condition listed in Schedule
3.
69 Chief executive officer to provide information
(1) A person who is providing professional care or treatment at a
hospital and who has reasonable grounds for believing that:(a) a patient at the hospital has a notifiable disease,
or
(b) a person who was a patient at the hospital had a notifiable
disease at any time during the person’s stay in the
hospital,
has a duty, and is authorised, to ensure that the chief executive officer
of the hospital is aware of the matter.
(2) The chief executive officer of the hospital must provide the
Director-General, in accordance with the regulations, with such information as
may be prescribed by the regulations in relation to:(a) a patient at the hospital who has a notifiable disease,
or
(b) a person who was a patient at the hospital and who had a
notifiable disease at any time during the person’s stay in the
hospital.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3) The chief executive officer’s obligation under subsection
(2) arises immediately the chief executive officer is made aware, or otherwise
has reasonable grounds for believing, that the patient (or person who was a
patient) concerned has (or had) the disease.
(4) It is a defence to a prosecution under this section if the chief
executive officer satisfies the court that he or she had reasonable cause to
believe that the information concerned had been provided to the
Director-General.
(5) Proceedings for an offence under this section may be commenced at
any time within, but not later than, 2 years after the time at which the
offence is alleged to have been committed.
Division 3 Inspections and inquiries
70 Inspection of records
(1) The Minister may, at any reasonable time, inspect any written
records of a public authority that relate to public
health.
(2) It is the duty of a public authority to make available any written
record required for inspection in accordance with this
section.
(3) If:(a) a record kept by a public authority is not a written record,
and
(b) it could have been inspected under this section if it had been a
written record, and
(c) the Minister requires the public authority to produce, and make
available for inspection under this section, a written copy of the
record,
the public authority has a duty to comply with the
requirement.
(4) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to an inspection
under this section.
71 Inquiries by Director-General
(1) The Director-General may inquire into:(a) any matter relating to the health of the public,
or
(b) any matter that, under this Act, authorises a direction by, or
that requires the approval or consent of, the Minister or the
Director-General, or
(c) any alleged offence under this Act.
(2) For the purposes of an inquiry under this section, a person
authorised by the Director-General may enter any premises and:(a) require the occupier of the premises to make available for
inspection any records that are in the possession, or under the control, of
the occupier and relate to a matter in respect of which an inquiry is
authorised by this section, and
(b) inspect any records, whether or not made available under paragraph
(a), that are on the premises and relate to such a matter,
and
(c) take samples for the purpose of analysis of a substance found on
the premises.
(3) If:(a) a record kept on any premises is not a written record,
and
(b) a person authorised by the Director-General for the purposes of
this section could have inspected the record if it had been a written record,
and
(c) a person so authorised requires the occupier of the premises to
make available for inspection a written copy of the record,
and
(d) the occupier refuses or fails to comply with the
requirement,
the occupier is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(4) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to any entry on
premises for the purposes of this section and to any inspection or other
action that is authorised by this section.
Part 8 Miscellaneous
72 Powers of entry
(1) A power conferred by this Act to enter premises, or to make an
inspection or take other action on premises, may not be exercised unless the
person proposing to exercise the power:(a) is in possession of a certificate of authority,
and
(b) gives reasonable notice to the occupier of the premises of
intention to exercise the power, unless the giving of notice would defeat the
purpose for which it is intended to exercise the power,
and
(c) exercises the power at a reasonable time, unless it is being
exercised in an emergency, and
(d) produces the certificate of authority if required to do so by the
occupier of the premises, and
(e) uses no more force than is reasonably necessary to effect the
entry or make the inspection.
(2) A certificate of authority must:(a) state that it is issued under the Public Health Act 1991,
and
(b) give the name of the person to whom it is issued,
and
(c) describe the nature of the powers conferred and the source of the
powers, and
(d) state the date, if any, on which it expires,
and
(e) describe the kind of premises to which the power extends,
and
(f) bear the signature of the person by whom it is issued and state
the capacity in which the person is acting in issuing the
certificate.
(3) If damage is caused by a person exercising a power to enter
premises, a reasonable amount of compensation is recoverable as a debt owed by
the employer of the person to the owner of the premises unless the occupier
obstructed the exercise of the power.
(4) If goods are taken from premises by a person who exercises a power
to enter the premises, a person otherwise entitled to possession of the goods
is, as far as is practicable, to be allowed access to the
goods.
(5) This section does not apply to a power conferred by a search
warrant issued under the Law Enforcement
(Powers and Responsibilities) Act
2002.
(6) In this section, certificate of
authority means a certificate that, to enable a person to exercise a
power conferred by this Act, is issued to the person:(a) by the Minister or the Director-General, unless the power is to be
exercised on behalf of a local authority, or
(b) by a local authority if the power is to be exercised on behalf of
the local authority.
73 Search warrants
(1) In this section:authorised
officer has the same meaning as it has in the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act
2002.
(2) A person who has the written authority of the Minister, the
Director-General or a local authority to do so may apply to an authorised
officer for a search warrant in relation to premises if admission to the
premises has been refused, or an attempt to obtain admission has been, or is
likely to be, unsuccessful, and:(a) there are reasonable grounds for believing that an offence under
this Act or the regulations has been, or is being, committed on the premises,
or
(b) the search warrant is sought in order to exercise a power to enter
or inspect conferred by this Act.
(3) An authorised officer to whom an application is made under this
section may, if satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for doing so,
issue a search warrant authorising a person named in the warrant to enter the
premises.
(4) Division 4 of Part 5 of the Law
Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 applies to
a search warrant issued under this section.
74 Obstruction or assault of officers and others
(1) A person who intimidates or wilfully obstructs or hinders another
person exercising, or attempting to exercise, a function conferred or imposed
on the other person by this Act is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) A person who assaults an authorised officer in the course of the
exercise by the officer of his or her duties under this Act or the regulations
is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 6 months, or both.
75 Disclosure of information
(1) A person who discloses information obtained in connection with the
administration of this Act is guilty of an offence unless the court is
satisfied that there was a lawful excuse for the disclosure.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(2) The reference in this section to a lawful excuse for the
disclosure of information includes a reference to disclosure of the
information:(a) with the consent of the person to whom it relates,
or
(b) in connection with the administration or execution of this Act,
or
(c) for the purposes of legal proceedings arising out of this Act or
of a report of any such legal proceedings, or
(d) in accordance with a requirement imposed under the Ombudsman Act 1974,
or
(e) in any other prescribed circumstances.
76 Service of notices and other documents
(1) The giving of notice to, or service of a notice or other document
on, a person for the purposes of this Act may be effected by delivering it, or
a true copy, to the residence of the person.
(2) The giving of notice to, or service of a notice or other document
on, the owner or occupier of premises in that capacity may be effected for the
purposes of this Act:(a) by delivering it to a person on the premises,
or
(b) if there is no person on the premises to whom it can be
delivered—by fixing it to some conspicuous part of the
premises.
(3) Instead of giving a notice, or serving a notice or other document,
as is otherwise provided by this section, it may be served by
post.
77 Exclusion of personal liability
(1) A person who exercises a function under this Act in good faith and
for the purpose of executing this Act is not to be subjected personally to any
action, liability, claim or demand based on the exercise of the
function.
(2) Without affecting the generality of subsection (1), a person is
not to be subjected personally to any legal proceedings, civil or criminal,
for sending, giving or serving, in good faith, without negligence and for the
purposes of this Act, a certificate, notice or other
communication.
78 Offences by corporations
(1) If a corporation commits an offence under this Act or the
regulations, each person who is a director of the corporation, or who is
concerned in the management of the corporation, is to be taken to have
committed the same offence if the person knowingly authorised or permitted the
act or omission constituting the offence.
(2) A person may be proceeded against and convicted under a provision
pursuant to this section whether or not the corporation has been proceeded
against or convicted under that provision.
(3) Nothing in this section affects any liability imposed on a
corporation for an offence committed by the corporation under this Act or the
regulations.
79 Proceedings for offences
(1) Proceedings for an offence under this Act are to be disposed of
summarily before the Local Court.
(2) This section does not affect the operation of section 10AB, 10L,
50, 61M or 69.
80 Amendment of Schedules
(1) The regulations may amend Schedule 1:(a) by inserting the name of a medical condition in Category 1, 2, 3,
4 or 5 in the Schedule, or
(b) by omitting the name of a medical condition from Category 1, 2, 3,
4 or 5 in the Schedule.
(2) The regulations may amend or substitute Schedule
2.
(3) The regulations may amend Schedule 3 by inserting or omitting the
name of a notifiable disease or a reference by means of which a notifiable
disease may be identified.
81 Act binds the Crown
(1) This Act binds the Crown in right of New South Wales and, in so
far as the legislative power of Parliament permits, the Crown in all its other
capacities.
(2) Nothing in this Act renders the Crown liable to be prosecuted for
an offence.
82 Regulations
(1) The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act,
for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to
be prescribed, or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed, for
carrying out or giving effect to this Act.
(2) In particular, the regulations may make provision for or with
respect to any of the following:(a) the prevention, mitigation and eradication of risks to public
health,
(b) (Repealed)
(c) the places at which, and the conditions subject to which, a person
may be detained under a public health order,
(c1) the closure of public swimming pools and public spas for any
period during which they are a risk to public health,
(d) the installation, operation, maintenance and inspection of a
regulated system within the meaning of Part 4,
(e) the functions (including powers of entry and inspection) of local
authorities and authorised officers in relation to a regulated system within
the meaning of Part 4,
(f) the directions that, in relation to a regulated system within the
meaning of Part 4, may be given by a local authority or an authorised officer
during, or as a result of, an investigation of an occurrence of
Legionnaires’ disease,
(g) compliance with directions referred to in paragraph
(f),
(h) the provision of information by the owner or occupier of premises
in relation to a regulated system within the meaning of Part 4 which is
installed on the premises,
(i) the provision and keeping of operation manuals, and maintenance
manuals, for a regulated system within the meaning of Part
4,
(j) the keeping of records, and the making of reports, in relation to
a regulated system within the meaning of Part 4,
(k) the preparation rooms, equipment and apparatus in mortuaries,
crematories and cemeteries, and any other matter relating to mortuaries,
crematories and cemeteries that is for the protection of the health of the
public,
(l) the inspection of mortuaries, crematories and cemeteries and of
premises that may reasonably be suspected of being mortuaries, crematories or
cemeteries,
(m) the records to be kept in relation to mortuaries, crematories and
cemeteries, and the inspection of records (including the making of copies or
extracts from such records by or for environmental health officers and the
public), equipment and apparatus in mortuaries, crematories and cemeteries or
premises that may reasonably be suspected of being mortuaries, crematories or
cemeteries,
(n) the cases in which, the manner in which, and the conditions under
which, cremations of human remains may take place,
(o) matters preliminary to, and consequential upon, cremations of
human remains,
(p) the fees that may be charged for the cremation of human remains,
for the preservation or disposal of the ashes and for related
services,
(q) the registration of cremations and burials and (with any necessary
modifications) the application to the registration of cremations of the
provisions of any other Act, or of any law, in force in relation to the
registration of a burial of the body of a deceased person,
(r) the embalming, interment, disposal and exhumation of the bodies of
deceased persons,
(s) the payment of specified fees in relation to applications made,
approvals given, and other matters arising, under this
Act.
(3) Section 72 (Powers of entry) applies in relation to any entry on,
or inspection of or on, premises in accordance with a
regulation.
(4) A regulation may apply, adopt or incorporate a publication as in
force for the time being.
(5) The regulations may create offences punishable by a penalty not
exceeding 20 penalty units.
83 Repeal of Public Health (Amendment) Act
1989 No 86
The Public Health (Amendment) Act
1989 is repealed on the day on which Part 4 of this Act
commences.
84 Savings and transitional provisions
Schedule 4 has effect.
Schedule 1 Scheduled medical conditions
(Section 3)
Category 1
Birth
Congenital malformation (as described in the “Manual of the
International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of
Death” published by the World Health Organization, Geneva) in a child
under the age of 1 year
Cystic fibrosis in a child under the age of 1 year
Hypothyroidism in a child under the age of 1 year
Perinatal Death
Phenylketonuria in a child under the age of 1 year
Pregnancy with a child having a congenital malformation (as described in
the “Manual of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases,
Injuries, and Causes of Death” published by the World Health
Organization, Geneva), cystic fibrosis, hypothyroidism, thalassaemia major or
phenylketonuria
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
Thalassaemia major in a child under the age of 1
year
Category 2
To be notified by medical practitionersAcquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Acute viral hepatitis
Adverse event following immunisation
Avian influenza in humans
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(vCJD)
Foodborne illness in two or more related cases
Gastroenteritis among people of any age in an institution (eg among
persons in educational or residential institutions)
Leprosy
Measles
Pertussis (Whooping cough)
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Smallpox
Swine influenza in humans
Syphilis
Tuberculosis
Category 3
To be notified by laboratoriesAnthrax
Arboviral infections
Avian influenza in humans
Botulism
Brucellosis
Cancer
Chancroid
Chlamydia
Cholera
Congenital malformation (as described in the “Manual of the
International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of
Death” published by the World Health Organization, Geneva)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(vCJD)
Cryptosporidiosis
Cystic fibrosis
Diphtheria
Donovanosis
Giardiasis
Gonorrhoea
Haemophilus influenzae type b
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis D (delta)
Hepatitis E
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
Hypothyroidism
Invasive pneumococcal infection
Influenza
Lead poisoning (as defined by a blood lead level of or above
15µg/dL)
Legionella infections
Leptospirosis
Listeriosis
Lymphogranuloma venereum
Lyssavirus
Malaria
Measles
Meningococcal infections
Mumps
Pertussis (Whooping Cough)
Phenylketonuria
Plague
Poliomyelitis
Pregnancy with a child having a congenital malformation (as described in
the “Manual of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases,
Injuries, and Causes of Death” published by the World Health
Organization, Geneva), cystic fibrosis, hypothyroidism, thalassaemia major or
phenylketonuria
Psittacosis
Q fever
Rabies
Rotavirus
Rubella
Salmonella infections
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Shigellosis
Smallpox
Swine influenza in humans
Syphilis
Thalassaemia major
Tuberculosis
Tularaemia
Typhus (epidemic)
Verotoxin-producing
Escherichia coli infection
Viral haemorrhagic fevers
Yellow fever
Category 4
Avian influenza in humans
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Swine influenza in humans
Tuberculosis
Typhoid
Category 5
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Human Immunodeficiency Virus infection
Schedule 2 Health warnings
(Sections 55, 56)
Health warnings must meet the requirements of Part 3 of the
Trade Practices (Consumer Product
Information) (Tobacco) Regulations made under the
Trade Practices Act 1974 of the
Commonwealth, as in force from time to time, in so far as they relate to
marking, display, position, prominence and rotation.
Schedule 3 Notifiable diseases
(Section 68)
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Acute viral hepatitis
Adverse event following immunisation
Avian influenza in humans
Botulism
Cancer
Cholera
Congenital malformation (as described in the “Manual of the
International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of
Death” published by the World Health Organization, Geneva) in a child
under the age of 1 year
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (vCJD)
Cystic fibrosis in a child under the age of 1 year
Diphtheria
Foodborne illness in two or more related cases
Gastroenteritis among people of any age, in an institution (eg
among persons in educational or residential institutions)
Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome
Haemophilus influenzae type b
Hypothyroidism in a child under the age of 1 year
Legionnaires’ disease
Leprosy
Lyssavirus
Measles
Meningococcal disease
Paratyphoid
Pertussis (Whooping cough)
Phenylketonuria in a child under the age of 1 year
Plague
Poliomyelitis
Pregnancy with a child having a congenital malformation (as
described in the “Manual of the International Statistical Classification
of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of Death” published by the World
Health Organization, Geneva), cystic fibrosis, hypothyroidism, thalassaemia
major or phenylketonuria
Rabies
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Smallpox
Swine influenza in humans
Syphilis
Tetanus
Thalassaemia major in a child under the age of 1
year
Tuberculosis
Typhoid
Typhus (epidemic)
Viral haemorrhagic fevers
Yellow fever
Schedule 4 Savings and transitional provisions
(Section 84)
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Regulations
(1) The regulations may include provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of this
Act.
(2) A provision referred to in subclause (1) may, if the regulations
so provide, take effect from the repeal of the Public Health Act
1902 or later.
(2A) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the Health
Legislation Amendment Act 1995 or any of the following
Acts:Public Health Amendment (Tobacco Advertising) Act
1997.
Health Legislation Further
Amendment Act 2004 (but only to the extent that it amends this
Act or repeals the Nursing Homes Act
1988)
Health Legislation Amendment
(Unregistered Health Practitioners) Act
2006
(2B) A provision referred to in subclause (2A) may, if the regulations
so provide, take effect from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a
later date.
(2C) The regulations may also contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the Water
Legislation Amendment (Drinking Water and Corporate Structure) Act
1998, but only in relation to the amendments made to this Act.
Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect from the
date of assent to that Act or a later date.
(3) To the extent that a provision referred to in subclause (1), (2A)
or (2C) takes effect from a date that is earlier than the date of its
publication in the Gazette, the provision does not operate:(a) to affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the
State or an authority of the State) the rights of that person existing before
the date of publication, or
(b) to impose liabilities on any person (other than the State or an
authority of the State) in respect of anything done or omitted to be done
before that date of publication.
Part 2 Provisions consequent on enactment of this
Act
2 Definitions
In this Part:appointed
day means the day appointed for the repeal of the
Public Health Act 1902.
former Act
means the Public Health Act 1902 as in force
immediately before the commencement of this Part.
3 Effect of proclamation under former Act
If a proclamation in force under the former Act immediately before
the appointed day had an effect that could be achieved under this Act by an
order, the proclamation continues on that day to have effect as if it were
such an order.
4 Medical districts and medical officers of health
(1) A notification of a district in force under section 16 of the
former Act immediately before the appointed day continues to have effect as if
it were an order published on that day under section 63 of this
Act.
(2) The appointment under section 18 of the former Act of a medical
officer of health holding office immediately before the appointed day for a
district continues to have effect as if it were a nomination made on that day
under section 63 of this Act for that medical
district.
5 Failure of local authority to exercise power
(1) If, immediately before the appointed day, the Director-General was
entitled under section 24 or 26A of the former Act to exercise a power, or to
recover the cost of exercising a power, following a failure on the part of a
local authority to comply with a requirement under that section to exercise
the power, the failure to comply with the requirement has effect as a failure
on the appointed day to comply with the same requirement made in a notice
under section 10 of this Act given to the local
authority.
(2) If, immediately before the appointed day, the time for compliance
with a requirement made under section 24 or 26A of the former Act had not
expired, the requirement has effect on the appointed day as if it were a
requirement of a notice under section 10 of this Act to be complied with no
later than the latest time for compliance fixed by the former
Act.
6 School closure
If, immediately before the appointed day, a school or college was
still closed in accordance with a notice published under section 41 of the
former Act, the notice has effect on the appointed day as an order in force
under section 8 of this Act.
7 Public health orders
A public health order in force immediately before the appointed
day under Division 3A of Part 3B of the former Act continues to have effect as
if it were a public health order:(a) made on the appointed day under Division 6 of Part 3 of this Act,
and
(b) expiring when it would have expired if the former Act had not been
repealed.
8 Approval relating to crematory
An approval in force immediately before the appointed day under
section 51 (3) or (4) of the former Act takes effect on the appointed day as
if it had been made on that day under section 52 of this
Act.
9 Closure of water supply
If, immediately before the appointed day, a well, dam, tank,
stream or other source of water supply was still closed in accordance with a
direction given in a notification published under section 72 of the former
Act, the notification has effect on that day as an order in force under
section 7 of this Act.
Part 3 Provisions consequent on enactment of the
Health Legislation Amendment Act 1995
10 Definition
In this Part, the
Act means the Health Legislation Amendment Act
1995.
11 Proceedings for offences under Part 4 (section
50)
Section 50 (4), as replaced by Schedule 3 (1) to the Act, does not
apply in respect of an offence alleged to have been committed before the
replacement of that subsection. Section 50 (4), as in force immediately before
its replacement by Schedule 3 (1) to the Act, continues to apply in respect of
any such offence as if it had not been replaced.
12 Chief executive officer to provide information (section
69)
(1) The duty, under section 69 (1), as inserted by Schedule 3 (2) to
the Act, of a person who is providing professional care or treatment at a
hospital does not apply in respect of a period during which a person was a
patient at the hospital before the commencement of Schedule 3 (2) to the
Act.
(2) The obligation, under section 69 (2), as inserted by Schedule 3
(2) to the Act, of the chief executive officer of a hospital does not apply in
respect of a period during which a person was a patient at the hospital before
the commencement of Schedule 3 (2) to the Act. However, section 69, as in
force immediately before the commencement of Schedule 3 (2) to the Act,
continues to apply in relation to information, concerning persons suffering
from a notifiable disease who are, or who have been, patients at the hospital,
that the chief executive officer possessed immediately before that
commencement.
Part 4 Provisions consequent on enactment of the
Public Health Amendment (Tobacco) Act
1996
13 Sale of tobacco to persons under 18
(1) Section 59, as amended by the Public Health
Amendment (Tobacco) Act 1996, does not apply in respect of
proceedings for an offence under that section alleged to have been committed
before the commencement of that amendment.
(2) Section 59, as in force immediately before the commencement of
that amendment, continues to apply in respect of any such proceedings as if
the amendment had not been made.
14 Liability of employers
Section 59A, as inserted by the Public Health
Amendment (Tobacco) Act 1996, does not apply in respect of a
contravention of section 59 that occurred before the commencement of section
59A.
Part 5 Provisions consequent on enactment of the
Public Health Amendment (Tobacco Advertising) Act
1997
15 Saving of certain exemptions
An exemption under section 12 of the Tobacco
Advertising Prohibition Act 1991 that was in force immediately
before the repeal of that section continues to have effect as though that
section were still in force, and despite the provisions of section
61H.
16 Termination of agreement
(1) The agreement dated 14 April 1989 made between the Minister for
Health and Phillip Morris (Aust) Limited, Rothmans of Pall Mall (Aust)
Limited, W D and H O Wills (Aust) Limited and R J Reynolds Tobacco (Aust)
Inc., is terminated.
(2) No person is entitled to compensation, and no action or
proceedings at law or in equity may be instituted or maintained by any person
in respect of the termination of the agreement.
17 Tobacco Advertising Prohibition Committee
(1) The Tobacco Advertising Prohibition Committee is
dissolved.
(2) No compensation or remuneration is payable to a former member of
the Tobacco Advertising Prohibition Committee for loss of office as a
consequence of the enactment of this clause.
18 Tobacco vending machines
Despite section 61F, a tobacco vending machine that, on the day
before the Public Health Amendment (Tobacco
Advertising) Bill 1997 was introduced into the Legislative
Assembly, was lawfully placed on licensed premises (within the meaning of the
Liquor Act 1982) that do
not include a restricted area (within the meaning of that Act) may continue to
be placed there until the close of business on 31 December
1998.
Part 6 Provision consequent on the repeal of the Nursing Homes Act 1988
19 Reference to nursing homes in other Acts, instruments or
documents
A reference in any other Act, statutory instrument or other
document to a nursing home within the meaning of the Nursing Homes Act 1988 is taken to
include a reference to a nursing home within the meaning of this
Act.
Part 7 Provisions consequent on enactment of the Health Legislation Amendment (Unregistered Health
Practitioners) Act 2006
20 De-registered health practitioners
Division 3 of Part 2A, as inserted by the Health Legislation Amendment (Unregistered Health
Practitioners) Act 2006, extends to a health practitioner
whose registration is, immediately before that Division commences, cancelled
(within the meaning of that Division) or suspended.
Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
Subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments
Public Health Act 1991 No
10. Assented to 26.4.1991. Date of commencement, 18.11.1991, sec 2
and GG No 159 of 15.11.1991, p 9520. This Act has been amended as
follows:
1991 | No 92 | Search Warrants (Amendment) Act
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement, 20.9.1992, sec 2 and GG No 116 of 18.9.1992, p
6837.
|
| | No 94 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the Public Health Act 1991, assent, Sch
2.
|
1992 | No 34 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1992. Assented to 18.5.1992. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Public Health Act 1991, assent, Sch
1.
|
| | No 110 | Public Health (Amendment) Act 1992.
Assented to 8.12.1992. Date of commencement, 14.5.1993, sec 2 and GG No 47 of 14.5.1993, p
2254.
|
1993 | No 32 | Local Government (Consequential Provisions) Act
1993. Assented to 8.6.1993. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.7.1993, sec 2 (1) and GG No 73 of
1.7.1993, p 3342.
|
1994 | No 19 | Health Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act
1994. Assented to 16.5.1994. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 1.7.1994, sec 2 and GG No 88 of 1.7.1994,
p 3240. Sch 2 was not commenced and was repealed by the Public
Health Amendment Act 1996 No 1.
|
| | No 32 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1994. Assented to 2.6.1994. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Public Health Act 1991, 24.2.1995,
Sch 1 and GG No 18 of 24.2.1995, p 918.
|
1995 | No 9 | Health Legislation Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 9.6.1995. Date of commencement, 14.6.1995, sec 2 and GG No 72 of 14.6.1995, p
3113.
|
| | No 11 | Statute Law Revision (Local Government) Act
1995. Assented to 9.6.1995. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Public Health Act 1991, 23.6.1995,
sec 2 (1) and GG No 77 of 23.6.1995, p 3279.
|
| | No 62 | Births, Deaths and Marriages
Registration Act 1995. Assented to 12.12.1995. Date of commencement, 1.1.1996, sec 2 and GG No 156 of 22.12.1995, p
8682.
|
1996 | No 1 | Public Health Amendment Act 1996.
Assented to 8.5.1996. Date of commencement, 29.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 71 of 14.6.1996, p
2995.
|
| | No 33 | Public Health Amendment (Tobacco) Act
1996. Assented to 24.6.1996. Date of commencement, 1.10.1996, sec 2 and GG No 110 of 27.9.1996, p
6524.
|
1997 | No 77 | Administrative Decisions Legislation Amendment Act
1997. Assented to 10.7.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 5.25, 6.10.1998, sec 2 and GG No 143 of
2.10.1998, p 7889.
|
| | No 109 | Business Franchise Licences
(Repeal) Act 1997. Assented to 9.12.1997. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 129 | Public Health Amendment (Tobacco Advertising) Act
1997. Assented to 16.12.1997. Date of commencement, 31.8.1999, sec 2 and GG No 98 of 27.8.1999, p
6687.
|
| | No 154 | Health Services Act
1997. Assented to 19.12.1997. Date of commencement, 1.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 97 of 26.6.1998, p
4423.
|
1998 | No 137 | Justices Legislation Amendment (Appeals) Act
1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. The amendment made by Sch 2.22 was not commenced and was repealed by the
Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
(No 2) 2000 No 93.
|
| | No 145 | Water Legislation Amendment (Drinking Water and
Corporate Structure) Act 1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement, 1.1.1999, sec 2 and GG No 176 of 18.12.1998, p
9726.
|
1999 | No 76 | Health Legislation Amendment Act
1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement, 14.1.2000, sec 2 and GG No 3 of 14.1.2000, p
167.
|
| | No 85 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 2.51, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2000 | No 64 | Medical Practice Amendment Act
2000. Assented to 5.7.2000. Date of commencement, 1.10.2000, sec 2 and GG No 125 of 22.9.2000, p
10679.
|
2001 | No 15 | Chiropractors Act
2001. Assented to 30.4.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 1.8.2002, sec 2 and GG No 124 of
31.7.2002, p 5696.
|
| | No 64 | Dental Practice Act
2001. Assented to 11.10.2001. Date of commencement, 15.8.2004, sec 2 and GG No 134 of 13.8.2004, p
6449.
|
| | No 67 | Physiotherapists Act
2001. Assented to 11.10.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 6.7, 1.12.2002, sec 2 and GG No 237 of
29.11.2002, p 10062
|
2002 | No 30 | Optometrists Act
2002. Assented to 21.6.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 6.7, 16.6.2004, sec 2 and GG No 97 of
16.6.2004, p 3723.
|
| | No 91 | Public Health Amendment
(Juvenile Smoking) Act 2002. Assented to 28.11.2002. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 103 | Law Enforcement (Powers and
Responsibilities) Act 2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.12.2005, sec 2 and GG No 45 of
15.4.2005, p 1356.
|
2003 | No 40 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2003. Assented to 22.7.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.25, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 45 | Nurses Amendment Act
2003. Assented to 30.9.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.18 [1] and [2], 1.6.2004, sec 2 (1) and GG
No 91 of 28.5.2004, p 3221; date of commencement of Sch 2.18 [3] and [4],
1.8.2004, sec 2 (1) and GG No 126 of 30.7.2004, p
6114.
|
| | No 69 | Podiatrists Act
2003. Assented to 20.11.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 6.6, 9.12.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 154 of
9.12.2005, p 10028.
|
2004 | No 40 | State Water Corporation Act
2004. Assented to 30.6.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 3.12 [1] [3] and [4], 1.7.2004, sec 2 and GG
No 110 of 1.7.2004, p 4983; date of commencement of Sch 3.12 [2], 1.1.2005,
sec 2 and GG No 204 of 24.12.2004, p 9667.
|
| | No 87 | Health Legislation Further
Amendment Act 2004. Assented to 30.11.2004. Date of commencement, 1.1.2005, sec 2 and GG No 200 of 17.12.2004, p
9305.
|
2005 | No 82 | Health Legislation Amendment Act
2005. Assented to 17.11.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 9.12.2005, sec 2 (2) and GG No 154 of
9.12.2005, p 10028.
|
| | (842) | Public Health Amendment (Avian
Influenza) Regulation 2005. GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p
10954. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
2006 | No 59 | Pharmacy Practice Act
2006. Assented to 7.9.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 7.17, 25.2.2008, sec 2 (1) and GG No 21 of
22.2.2008, p 1038. Amended by Health
Legislation Amendment (Unregistered Health Practitioners) Act 2006 No
124. Assented to 4.12.2006. Date of commencement, assent, sec
2.
|
| | No 104 | Water Industry Competition Act
2006. Assented to 27.11.2006. Date of commencement, 8.8.2008, sec 2 and GG No 95 of 8.8.2008, p
7438.
|
| | No 124 | Health Legislation Amendment
(Unregistered Health Practitioners) Act 2006. Assented to
4.12.2006. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
2007 | No 89 | Health Legislation Amendment Act
2007. Assented to 13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 2.13 [1]–[3], assent, sec 2 (1); date
of commencement of Sch 2.13 [4], 1.1.2008, sec 2 (3) and GG No 185 of
21.12.2007, p 9811.
|
| | No 94 | Miscellaneous Acts (Local Court)
Amendment Act 2007. Assented to 13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Schs 2 and 4, 6.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (314) LW
3.7.2009. So much of Sch 2 as amends sec 61M and so much of Sch 4 as amends
secs 61K and 61M were without effect as the provisions were repealed by the
Public Health (Tobacco) Act
2008.
|
2008 | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Schs 2.45 and 3, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 94 | Public Health (Tobacco) Act
2008. Assented to 20.11.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.3, 1.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (292) LW
26.6.2009.
|
2009 | (140) | Public Health Amendment (Swine
Influenza) Regulation 2009. LW 29.4.2009. Date of commencement, on publication on LW, cl
2.
|
| (594) | Public Health Amendment (Rotavirus)
Regulation 2009. LW 18.12.2009. Date of commencement, on publication on LW.
|
This Act has also been amended by regulations under sec 80.
Editorial note. This update does not include amendments made by Gazette No 168 of
22.12.2000, p 13554 which were published in error—see erratum in Gazette
No 170 of 29.12.2000, p 13954.
Table of amendments
Sec 3 | Am 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (1); 1995 No 11, Sch 1; 1995
No 62, Sch 2; 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [1]; 1997 No 154, Sch 6.40 [1]; 2004 No 87,
Sch 5 [1]; 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [1]. |
Part 2, heading | Subst 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 4 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1. |
Sec 6 | Am 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (2). |
Sec 7 | Am 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (3). Rep 1998 No 145, Sch 1
[2]. |
Part 2A | Ins 2000 No 64, Sch 2.2 [2]. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch
1 [2]. |
Part 2A, Div 1, heading | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Secs 10AA, 10AB | Ins 2000 No 64, Sch 2.2 [2]. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch
1 [2]. |
Part 2A, Div 2, heading | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Sec 10AC | Ins 2001 No 15, Sch 6.5. Am 2001 No 67, Sch 6.7
[1]; 2003 No 45, Sch 2.18 [1]. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 10AD | Ins 2001 No 67, Sch 6.7 [2]. Am 2003 No 45, Sch
2.18 [2]; 2003 No 69, Sch 6.6 [1]. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 10AE | Ins 2002 No 30, Sch 6.7. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 10AF | Ins 2001 No 64, Sch 6.5. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 10AG | Ins 2003 No 45, Sch 2.18 [3]. Subst 2006 No 124,
Sch 1 [2]. |
Sec 10AH | Ins 2003 No 69, Sch 6.6 [2]. Am 2005 No 82, Sch 6
[1] [2]. Subst 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. Am 2006 No 59, Sch 7.17 (am 2006 No
124, Sch 3.10 [7]). |
Sec 10AI | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Part 2A, Div 3 (secs
10AJ–10AL) | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Part 2A, Div 4 | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Sec 10AM | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. Am 2008 No 62, Sch 2.45
[1]. |
Sec 10AN | Ins 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [2]. |
Part 2B (previously Part 2A) | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. Renumbered 2000 No 64,
Sch 2.2 [1]. |
Part 2B, Div 1 | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 10A | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. Am 2004 No 40, Sch 3.12
[1] [2]; 2006 No 104, Sch 3.8 [1]. |
Part 2B, Divs 2, 3 (secs
10B–10H) | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Part 2B, Div 4 | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 10I | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. Am 2004 No 40, Sch 3.12
[3] [4]. |
Sec 10IA | Ins 2006 No 104, Sch 3.8 [2]. |
Secs 10J, 10K | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 10L, heading | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. Am 2000 No 64, Sch 2.2
[3]. |
Sec 10L | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 10M, heading | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. Am 2000 No 64, Sch 2.2
[3]. |
Sec 10M | Ins 1998 No 145, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 14 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1; 1992 No 110, Sch 2
(4). |
Sec 16 | Am 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (5); 2007 No 89, Sch 2.13
[1]. |
Sec 17 | Am 1994 No 19, Sch 1 (1). |
Sec 20 | Am 1995 No 62, Sch 2. |
Sec 21 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [2]
[3]. |
Sec 23 | Am 1994 No 19, Sch 1 (2). |
Sec 24 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [5]. |
Secs 25, 26 | Subst 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25
[6]. |
Sec 30 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [4]
[7]. |
Sec 31 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [4]. |
Sec 32 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [8]. |
Sec 35 | Am 2008 No 62, Sch 3.8 [1]. |
Sec 36 | Am 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [4]. |
Sec 39 | Am 2008 No 62, Sch 3.8 [2]. |
Part 3, Div 8 | Subst 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25
[9]. |
Secs 40, 41 | Subst 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25
[9]. |
Sec 42 | Rep 1997 No 77, Sch 5.25 [9]. |
Part 3A (secs 42A–42D) | Ins 1992 No 110, Sch 1. |
Part 3B, Div 1 | Ins 1996 No 1, Sch 1. |
Sec 42E | Ins 1996 No 1, Sch 1. Am 2003 No 45, Sch 2.18
[4]. |
Part 3B, Divs 2, 3 (secs
42F–42P) | Ins 1996 No 1, Sch 1. |
Sec 50 | Am 1995 No 9, Sch 3 (1); 2007 No 94, Schs 2,
4. |
Part 5, heading | Subst 1999 No 76, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 51 | Rep 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Ins 1999 No 76, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 52 | Subst 2004 No 87, Sch 5 [2]. |
Part 6, heading | Subst 1999 No 76, Sch 1 [3]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Part 6 | Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Part 6, Div 1 | Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 53 | Am 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [1]–[3]; 1999 No 76,
Sch 1 [4]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Part 6, Div 2, heading | Subst 2007 No 89, Sch 2.13 [2]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Part 6, Div 2 | Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 53A | Ins 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [4]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 54 | Subst 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [4]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 54A | Ins 2007 No 89, Sch 2.13 [3]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Secs 55–57 | Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 57A | Ins 2007 No 89, Sch 2.13 [4]. Am 2008 No 62, Sch
2.45 [2]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Part 6, Div 3 | Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 58 | Rep 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [5]. Ins 2002 No 91, Sch 1
[1]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 58A | Ins 2002 No 91, Sch 1 [1]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 59 | Am 1996 No 33, Sch 1 (1); 1997 No 129, Sch 1
[6]–[9]; 1999 No 76, Sch 1 [5]–[9]; 2002 No 91, Sch 1 [2]; 2003 No
40, Sch 2.25. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 59AA | Ins 2002 No 91, Sch 1 [3]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 59A | Ins 1996 No 33, Sch 1 (2). Am 1997 No 109, Sch 1.5
[1]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 60 | Rep 1997 No 109, Sch 1.5 [2]. Ins 2002 No 91, Sch 1
[4]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Sec 61 | Am 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [9]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Part 6, Div 4 | Ins 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [10]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Secs 61A–61L | Ins 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [10]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 61M | Ins 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [10]. Am 1999 No 85, Sch
2.51. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch 2.3. |
Secs 61N–61P | Ins 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [10]. Rep 2008 No 94, Sch
2.3. |
Sec 62A | Ins 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (6). |
Sec 64 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1; 1995 No 62, Sch
2. |
Sec 65 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1; 1992 No 110, Sch 2
(7). |
Sec 67 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1. |
Sec 68 | Am 1997 No 154, Sch 6.40 [2]; 2004 No 87, Sch 5
[3]. |
Sec 69 | Subst 1995 No 9, Sch 3 (2). |
Sec 71 | Am 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 72 | Am 1991 No 94, Sch 2; 2002 No 103, Sch 4.75
[1]. |
Sec 73 | Am 1991 No 92, Sch 2; 2002 No 103, Sch 4.75
[2]–[4]. |
Sec 74 | Am 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [11]
[12]. |
Sec 75 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1. |
Sec 79 | Am 1995 No 9, Sch 3 (3); 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [13];
1998 No 145, Sch 1 [4]; 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [4]; 2007 No 94, Sch
4. |
Sec 82 | Am 1992 No 110, Sch 2 (8); 1994 No 32, Sch 1; 1997
No 77, Sch 5.25 [10]. |
Sch 1 | Am GG No 159 of 15.11.1991, p 9528; GG No 47 of
14.5.1993, p 2260; GG No 23 of 3.3.1995, p 1080; GG No 119 of 25.10.1996, p
7122; GG No 117 of 31.10.1997, p 8826; GG No 139 of 25.9.1998, p 7693; GG No
162 of 15.12.2000, p 13176; GG No 170 of 29.12.2000, p 13951; GG No 73 of
16.4.2003, p 4485; GG No 95 of 6.6.2003, p 5032; GG No 74 of 16.4.2004, p
2106; 2005 (842), Sch 1 [1]; 2009 (140), cl 3 (1); 2009 (594), cl
2. |
Sch 2 | Subst GG No 98 of 27.8.1999, p
7357. |
Sch 3 | Am GG No 159 of 15.11.1991, p 9528; GG No 47 of
14.5.1993, p 2260; GG No 23 of 3.3.1995, p 1080; GG No 119 of 25.10.1996, p
7122; GG No 117 of 31.10.1997, p 8826; GG No 170 of 29.12.2000, p 13951; GG No
95 of 6.6.2003, p 5032; GG No 74 of 16.4.2004, p 2106; 2005 (842), Sch 1 [2];
2009 (140), cl 3 (2). |
Sch 4 | Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1; 1995 No 9, Sch 3
(4)–(6); 1996 No 33, Sch 1 (3); 1997 No 129, Sch 1 [14]–[16]; 1998
No 145, Sch 1 [5] [6]; 2004 No 87, Sch 5 [4] [5]; 2006 No 124, Sch 1 [5]
[6]. |