Health Services Regulation 2003 (NSW)
This Regulation is the Health Services Regulation 2003.
This Regulation commences on 1 September 2003.
This Regulation replaces the Health Services Regulation 1998 which is repealed on 1 September 2003 under section 10 (2) of the Subordinate Legislation Act 1989.
In this Regulation:
Section 105 (2) of the Act defines
(a) established by the public health organisation, and
(b) having the function of advising the public health organisation in relation to the appointment of persons as visiting practitioners to the public health organisation and the clinical privileges that should be allowed to those persons.
Terms defined in the Dictionary at the end of the Act and elsewhere in the Act include
Notes in the text of this Regulation do not form part of this Regulation.
A public health organisation that decides to make available an appointment as a visiting practitioner must advertise the availability of the appointment in at least one newspaper circulating generally in New South Wales. The public health organisation may, in addition, advertise the availability in other ways.
An application for appointment as a visiting practitioner is to be made in writing to the public health organisation concerned and is to include:
(a) a statement setting out the clinical privileges sought by the applicant, and
(b) an authority for the medical and dental appointments advisory committee of the public health organisation to obtain information as to the applicant’s past performance as a medical practitioner or dentist, as the case may be.
On receipt of the application, the public health organisation is to refer the application to that committee for advice.
Subclauses (1)–(3) do not apply:
(a) to an appointment as a visiting practitioner that is to be held as part of the duties of a person who is to be or has been appointed to a teaching position at a tertiary institution, or
(b) to an appointment as a visiting practitioner that is to be held by a person for a period of not more than 6 months, or
(c) to any appointment as a visiting practitioner, to the extent that the Director-General determines that the provisions of those subclauses are not to apply.
A determination under subclause (4) (c):
(a) may be made in respect of a particular appointment or in respect of appointments of any specified kind or description, and
(b) must be made in writing.
A person is to be appointed as a visiting practitioner to a public health organisation by written agreement between the person and the public health organisation.
The written agreement must specify the conditions to which the appointment is subject, including the clinical privileges of the visiting practitioner.
However, subclause (2) does not require conditions prescribed by or under the Act to be included in the written agreement.
The period for which a person may be appointed as a visiting practitioner is such period (not exceeding 5 years) as the public health organisation determines.
A person is, if otherwise qualified, eligible for re-appointment from time to time.
Despite subclause (1), a person may be appointed as a visiting practitioner for the duration of the person’s appointment to a teaching position at a tertiary institution (or for such lesser period as the public health organisation may determine) if the public health organisation has first obtained the advice of the medical and dental appointments advisory committee about the length of the appointment.
Despite subclause (1), a person may be appointed as a visiting practitioner for a period exceeding 5 years, but not exceeding 10 years, if the Director-General, in the particular circumstances of the case, approves of the additional period of appointment.
A person may resign an appointment as a visiting practitioner by giving 3 months’ written notice of resignation to the public health organisation concerned.
However, a public health organisation may waive that requirement for notice or accept a lesser period of time for the giving of such notice if, in the opinion of the public health organisation, it is reasonable to do so.
In this Part:
This clause applies in relation to a person only if the person’s employment in the NSW Health Service immediately follows the persons’s employment with a non-declared AHO. However, this clause does apply in relation to a person’s accrued long service leave entitlement if the break in employment is no longer than 2 months.
If a person:
(a) ceases to be employed by a non-declared AHO, and
(b) commences employment in the NSW Health Service in connection with a public health organisation,
the person is taken to have the amount of any accrued leave to which the person was entitled immediately before ceasing to be employed by the non-declared AHO.
In the case of any such accrued leave that comprises annual leave or long service leave, the person may, instead of retaining the entitlement to that accrued leave, elect to be paid the money value of that accrued leave.
The amount of any accrued annual leave that a person may retain under this clause cannot, except with the approval of the Director-General, exceed the amount of annual leave that the person was entitled to over a 2-year period as an employee of the non-declared AHO.
The non-declared AHO is liable for the cost of any annual or long service leave entitlements in respect of the person concerned that have accrued up until the date on which the person ceases to be employed by the non-declared AHO.
This clause does not apply in relation to a person who ceases to employed by a non-declared AHO by the operation of an order under section 64 of the Act.
This clause applies in relation to a person only if the person’s employment with a non-declared AHO immediately follows the persons’s employment in the NSW Health Service. However, this clause does apply in relation to a person’s accrued long service leave entitlement if the break in employment is no longer than 2 months.
If a person:
(a) ceases to be employed in the NSW Health Service in connection with a public health organisation, and
(b) commences employment with a non-declared AHO,
the person is taken to have the amount of any accrued leave to which the person was entitled immediately before ceasing to be employed in the NSW Health Service.
In the case of any such accrued leave that comprises annual leave or long service leave, the person may, instead of retaining the entitlement to that accrued leave, elect to be paid the money value of that accrued leave.
The amount of any accrued annual leave that a person may retain under this clause cannot, except with the approval of the non-declared AHO, exceed the amount of annual leave that the person was entitled to over a 2-year period as a member of the NSW Health Service.
The Government of New South Wales is liable for the cost of any annual or extended leave entitlements in respect of the person concerned that have accrued up until the date on which the person ceases to be employed in the NSW Health Service.
(Repealed)
The Samaritan Fund of a public health organisation is to be kept as a separate account in its Special Purposes and Trust Fund.
The Minister may determine the manner in which the accounts for a Samaritan Fund are to be kept and the circumstances in which those accounts are to be audited.
Money is not to be withdrawn from the Samaritan Fund of a public health organisation except by, or with the written approval of, the chief executive (or person authorised in writing by the chief executive) of the public health organisation.
Money is not to be withdrawn from the Samaritan Fund of a public health organisation except for payment to, or for the purchase of items for, a necessitous patient or necessitous outgoing patient. The payment or purchase may be made only if it is essential to the well-being of the patient.
In this clause:
For the purposes of section 67E (3) (e) of the Act, the Sydney West Area Health Service, in respect of services provided or operations conducted by the NSW newborn &paediatric Emergency Transport Service (
On the expiration of a person’s appointment or reappointment as administrator, the Governor may, by order published in the Gazette, reappoint the person as administrator for a further period or appoint another person as administrator.
The Governor may, by order published in the Gazette:
(a) remove from the office of administrator any person appointed to that office, or
(b) appoint a person to fill a vacancy in the office of administrator.
The Minister may appoint a person to act in the office of an administrator during the illness or absence of the administrator, and the person, while so acting, has and may exercise all the functions of the administrator and is taken to be administrator.
The Minister may remove from the office of administrator any person appointed to act in that office under subclause (3).
(Repealed)
If the administrator of a statutory health corporation was, immediately before his or her appointment under section 52 (1) (c) of the Act, the chief executive of the corporation, the person is declared to be an unattached officer of the corporation.
An unattached officer of a statutory health corporation continues to be employed by the corporation, in accordance with section 51 (6) of the Act, until the person ceases to be the administrator of the corporation.
In this clause:
An appeal under section 106 of the Act may be withdrawn at any time before the determination of the appeal by the appellant giving written notice of the withdrawal to the Minister in the form and manner approved by the Minister from time to time.
The Committee is not required to determine an appeal that has been withdrawn.
Any act, matter or thing that, immediately before the repeal of the Health Services Regulation 1998, had effect under (or was done for the purposes of) that Regulation continues to have effect under (or is taken to have been done for the purposes of) this Regulation.
In any Act or instrument, whether enacted or made before or after the commencement of this subclause, a reference to the chief executive officer, or the office of chief executive officer, of an area health service, statutory health corporation or affiliated health organisation is taken to include a reference to the chief executive, or the office of chief executive, of that service, corporation or organisation, as the case requires.
A reference in column 2 of Schedule 1 to the Act to
A reference in column 2 of Schedule 1 to the Act to
(Repealed)
In this clause:
(Repealed)
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