Physiotherapists Act 2001 (NSW)
An Act to provide for the registration of physiotherapists; to repeal the Physiotherapists Registration Act 1945; and for other purposes.
This Act is the Physiotherapists Act 2001.
This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by proclamation.
The object of this Act is to protect the health and safety of members of the public by providing mechanisms to ensure that physiotherapists are fit to practise.
In this Act:
Section 118 makes special provision with respect to the application for the purposes of this Act of the Criminal Records Act 1991 in respect of criminal findings.
Notes included in this Act are explanatory notes and do not form part of this Act.
This Act does not limit or otherwise affect the operation of the Mutual Recognition laws.
A person who is not a registered physiotherapist must not indicate that the person practises physiotherapy or is qualified to practise physiotherapy.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
Without limiting the ways in which a person may be taken to have indicated that the person is qualified to practise physiotherapy or that the person practises physiotherapy, a person is taken to have so indicated if the person uses:
(a) any name, initials, word, title, symbol or description that (having regard to the circumstances in which it is used) indicates, or is capable of being understood to indicate, or is calculated to lead a person to infer, that the person is qualified to practise physiotherapy or that the person practises physiotherapy, or
(b) the titles “physiotherapist” or “physical therapist”.
Section 10AC of the Public Health Act 1991 prohibits spinal manipulation by persons who are not registered chiropractors, medical practitioners, osteopaths or physiotherapists.
Section 10AD of that Act prohibits the use of prescribed electrophysical treatments by persons who are not registered chiropractors, medical practitioners, osteopaths, physiotherapists or podiatrists.
A person has the necessary qualifications for registration as a physiotherapist if the person:
(a) has such qualifications as may be prescribed by the regulations, or
(b) has successfully completed a course of study that is recognised by the Board as meeting criteria prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph, or
(c) has such qualifications as may be approved by the Board on the recommendation of an accreditation body recognised by the Board for the purposes of this section, or
(d) has passed an examination arranged or approved by the Board to assess the person’s competence to practise physiotherapy.
An educational or training institution may apply to the Board for the recognition by the Board (under subsection (1) (b)) of a course of study offered by the institution. The institution may make application to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal for a review of the decision of the Board on the application.
In determining for the purposes of subsection (1) (b) whether a particular course of study meets the criteria prescribed by the regulations, the Board may have regard to and rely on any findings made on an assessment prepared for the Board in respect of the course of study.
In this section:
For the purposes of this Act, a person is competent to practise physiotherapy only if the person has sufficient physical capacity, mental capacity and skill to practise physiotherapy and has sufficient communication skills for the practice of physiotherapy, including an adequate command of the English language.
For the purposes of this Act, a person suffers from an impairment if the person suffers from any physical or mental impairment, disability, condition or disorder that detrimentally affects or is likely to detrimentally affect the person’s physical or mental capacity to practise physiotherapy.
For the purposes of this Act, a person who habitually abuses alcohol or is addicted to a deleterious drug is taken to suffer from an impairment.
A person is entitled to registration as a physiotherapist if the Board is satisfied that the person has the necessary qualifications for registration as a physiotherapist, and is of good character.
Registration under this section is
An entitlement to full registration does not prevent conditions being imposed on that registration in accordance with this Act.
Schedule 1 (Registration procedures) has effect with respect to full registration.
Under section 20 of the Mutual Recognition Act 1992 of the Commonwealth a person is entitled to be registered as a physiotherapist if the person is registered in another State or a Territory for an equivalent occupation (if that State or Territory participates in the mutual recognition scheme). The entitlement arises once the person lodges a notice under section 19 of that Act and, until registered under this Act, the person is then deemed (by section 25 of that Act) to be registered. See also the Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act 1997 of the Commonwealth.
Registration as a physiotherapist may be granted:
(a) to a person entitled to full registration, pending the Board’s determination of the person’s application for full registration, or
(b) to a person who will be entitled to full registration when a degree, diploma, certificate or other academic award to which the person is entitled is granted or conferred, pending its grant or conferral.
Registration under this section is
Provisional registration is granted by the Board or the President. In the President’s absence it can be granted by any member of the Board authorised by the Board to do so. Provisional registration is granted by the grant of a certificate of provisional registration.
A person granted provisional registration is a registered physiotherapist until the registration expires or is cancelled. Provisional registration expires on the date stated in the certificate or such later date as may be fixed by the Board.
The Board may impose such conditions as it thinks fit on a person’s provisional registration and may at any time remove, add to or vary those conditions by notice in writing to the registered person.
The Board may cancel a person’s provisional registration for any reason that the Board considers proper. Cancellation does not affect any application for registration by the person.
If a person granted provisional registration is granted full registration before the person’s provisional registration expires, the person’s full registration dates from the granting of provisional registration, unless the Board decides otherwise.
Full registration or provisional registration is subject to a condition that the physiotherapist is limited to practising physiotherapy in an approved health institution until the Board is satisfied that the physiotherapist has satisfactorily completed the requisite period of practice in an approved health institution as a physiotherapist registered under this Act.
In this section:
(a) a public health organisation within the meaning of the Health Services Act 1997,
(b) any other body or organisation (whether or not in New South Wales), including a government department, approved by the Board for the purposes of this section.
The Board may exempt a person or class of persons from the operation of this section or may shorten the requisite period of practice in respect of a person or class of persons.
The Board is not considered to be satisfied that a physiotherapist has satisfactorily completed the requisite period of practice as a physiotherapist in an approved health institution unless the Board has certified in writing that it is so satisfied.
The Board may at any time revoke an approval referred to in subsection (2) (b).
Registration for a limited period may be granted to a person who is not normally resident in New South Wales, for the purpose of enabling the person to carry out educational or research activities or such other activities as the Board considers to be in the public interest.
Registration under this section is
Temporary registration can only be granted to a person:
(a) who is registered as a physiotherapist in accordance with a law in force in the person’s normal place of residence providing for the registration or certification of physiotherapists, or
(b) who holds such qualifications or has such experience in the practice of physiotherapy as the Board considers satisfactory for the purposes of temporary registration.
Temporary registration is granted by the Board by the grant of a certificate of temporary registration.
A person granted temporary registration is a registered physiotherapist until the temporary registration expires or is cancelled. Temporary registration expires on the date stated in the certificate unless the period of temporary registration is extended.
The Board may extend and further extend a period of temporary registration by the issue of a further certificate of temporary registration.
The Board may cancel a person’s temporary registration for any reason that the Board considers proper. Cancellation does not affect any application for full registration by the person.
The Board may impose such conditions as it thinks fit on the temporary registration of a person and may at any time remove, add to or vary those conditions by notice in writing to the registered person.
The Board may refuse to register a person who would otherwise be entitled to full registration if:
(a) the Board is of the opinion, following an inquiry under Schedule 1, that the person is not competent to practise physiotherapy or suffers from an impairment, or
(b) the person has been convicted of or made the subject of a criminal finding for an offence, either in or outside New South Wales, and the Board is of the opinion that the circumstances of the offence are such as to render the person unfit in the public interest to practise physiotherapy, or
(c) the person’s registration under a health registration Act has been cancelled or suspended because of conduct that would (if the person were a registered physiotherapist) authorise cancellation or suspension of the person’s registration under this Act, or
(d) the person’s registration or certification under a physiotherapists registration law has been cancelled or suspended because of conduct that would (if it occurred in New South Wales and the person were a registered physiotherapist) authorise cancellation or suspension of the person’s registration under this Act.
As an alternative to refusing to register a person under subsection (1), the Board may grant the person registration subject to conditions if the Board considers that refusal of registration is not warranted and that the person should be granted registration subject to appropriate conditions.
Conditions of registration may relate to the duration of registration, the aspects of the practice in which the person may be engaged, and any other matters, as the Board thinks appropriate.
The Mutual Recognition laws also provide for the imposition of conditions on registration. Conditions can also be imposed on a person’s registration as a result of disciplinary proceedings to which the person has been subject.
In this section:
A person ceases to be registered as a physiotherapist if the person’s name is removed from the Register. A reference in this Act to the cancellation of a physiotherapist’s registration is a reference to the removal of the physiotherapist’s name from the Register.
A person whose registration as a physiotherapist is suspended is taken not to be a registered physiotherapist during the period of the suspension, except for the purposes of Part 4 (Complaints and disciplinary proceedings).
A person cannot apply for registration (and any such application must be rejected) if:
(a) the person’s registration is cancelled pursuant to an order of the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson, the Tribunal or the Supreme Court, or
(b) the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson, the Tribunal or the Supreme Court orders that the person not be re-registered.
The only way such a person can again be registered is on a review under Division 3 of Part 6 of the order by which the person’s registration was cancelled.
A person who is aggrieved by any of the following decisions of the Board may appeal to the Tribunal against the decision:
(a) the Board’s refusal to grant the person full registration,
(b) the Board’s refusal to grant the person temporary registration,
(c) the Board’s refusal to certify that a person has satisfactorily completed the requisite period of practice in an approved health institution as a physiotherapist as provided by section 13,
(d) the Board’s decision to refuse to register the person under section 15 or to grant the person registration subject to conditions under that section,
(e) the Board’s cancellation of the person’s provisional registration or temporary registration,
(f) the Board’s refusal to register the person under clause 28 (Entitlement to re-registration if fee paid) of Schedule 1.
An appeal must be made within 28 days (or such longer period as the Chairperson may allow in a particular case) after notice of the decision is given to the person. The appeal is to be lodged with the Registrar who is to refer it to the Tribunal.
If the decision in respect of which an appeal is made was made as a consequence of an inquiry held by the Board, the appeal is to be dealt with by way of rehearing and fresh evidence, or evidence in addition to or in substitution for the evidence received at the inquiry, may be given.
An appeal does not affect any determination with respect to which it is made until the appeal is determined.
When it determines an appeal, the Tribunal may dismiss the appeal or order that the decision of the Board be revoked and replaced by a different decision made by the Tribunal and specified in the order. The Tribunal may also make such ancillary orders as it thinks proper.
The Tribunal’s decision is taken to be a decision of the Board (but this does not confer a right of appeal under this section in respect of the Tribunal’s decision).
No appeal lies under this Act against a decision of the Board under the Mutual Recognition laws in relation to its functions under that Act.
The Mutual Recognition laws provide that a person may, subject to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 of the Commonwealth, apply to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for a review of a decision of a local registration authority in relation to its functions under the Mutual Recognition laws. Those functions include registration, the imposition or waiver of conditions on registration and the postponement, refusal or reinstatement of registration.
Section 10AC of the Public Health Act 1991 prohibits spinal manipulation by persons who are not registered chiropractors, medical practitioners, osteopaths or physiotherapists.
Section 10AD of that Act prohibits the use of prescribed electrophysical treatments by persons who are not registered chiropractors, medical practitioners, osteopaths, physiotherapists or podiatrists.
A registered physiotherapist must not use the title “doctor” in the course of the practice of physiotherapy unless the physiotherapist is the holder of a qualification conferred by a university that entitles the physiotherapist to use that title and that qualification is a recognised qualification at the time the physiotherapist uses the title.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty units.
In this section:
(a) a qualification that is prescribed by the regulations as a recognised qualification, or
(b) when no qualification is prescribed under paragraph (a), a qualification that is for the time being recognised by the Board for the purposes of this section.
See also section 105 (Use of misleading titles etc) of the Medical Practice Act 1992.
The Board may establish a code of professional conduct setting out guidelines that should be observed by registered physiotherapists in their professional practice. The Board may from time to time amend or replace a code of professional conduct.
The Minister may require the Board to develop guidelines relating to any conduct of registered physiotherapists that the Minister considers should be the subject of a code of professional conduct.
For that purpose, the Minister may:
(a) direct the Board to establish a code of professional conduct, or
(b) direct the Board to amend or replace a code of professional conduct,
so that the code includes guidelines relating to that conduct.
The Board is to comply with any such direction of the Minister.
The provisions of a code of professional conduct are a relevant consideration in determining for the purposes of this Act what constitutes proper and ethical conduct by a physiotherapist.
The procedure for the establishment of a code of professional conduct is as follows:
(a) the Board is to prepare a proposed code in draft form and is to prepare an impact assessment statement for the proposed code in accordance with such requirements as the Minister may from time to time determine,
(b) the draft code and impact assessment statement are to be publicly exhibited for a period of at least 21 days,
(c) the Board is to seek public comment on the draft code during the period of public exhibition and public comment may be made during the period of public exhibition and for 21 days (or such longer period as the Board may determine) after the end of that period,
(d) the Board is to submit the draft code to the Minister for approval together with a report by the Board giving details of public comment received during the period allowed for public comment and the Board’s response to it,
(e) the Board is not to establish the draft code as a code of professional conduct unless the Minister approves the draft.
The procedure for the amendment or replacement of a code of professional conduct is the same as for the establishment of the code unless the Minister otherwise directs in respect of a particular amendment.
A registered physiotherapist must, on or before the return date in each year, furnish in writing to the Board in a form approved by the Board a return for the return period specifying the following information:
(a) details of any conviction of the physiotherapist for an offence in this State or elsewhere during the return period (together with details of any penalty imposed for the offence),
(b) details of the making of a sex/violence criminal finding against the physiotherapist for an offence, in this State or elsewhere, during the return period (together with details of any penalty imposed for the offence),
(c) details of the making of a criminal finding against the physiotherapist for an offence committed in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy, in this State or elsewhere, during the return period (together with details of any penalty imposed for the offence),
(d) details of any criminal proceedings pending against the physiotherapist at the end of the return period, in this State or elsewhere, for a sex/violence offence alleged to have been committed in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy,
(e) details of any criminal proceedings pending against the physiotherapist at the end of the return period, in this State or elsewhere, for a sex/violence offence alleged to have been committed against a minor or to involve child pornography (whether or not alleged to have been committed in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy),
(f) details of any significant illness (physical or mental) from which the physiotherapist suffered at any time during the return period and that may reasonably be thought likely to detrimentally affect the physiotherapist’s physical or mental capacity to practise physiotherapy,
(g) details of any suspension of, cancellation of, or imposition of conditions on, the registration of the physiotherapist as a physiotherapist in another jurisdiction (either within Australia or elsewhere) during the return period,
(h) details of any suspension of, cancellation of, or imposition of conditions on, any registration of the physiotherapist under a health registration Act during the return period,
(i) a statement as to whether the physiotherapist is registered under a health registration Act as at the date of the return,
(j) a statement as to whether the physiotherapist has been refused registration as a physiotherapist in another jurisdiction (either within Australia or elsewhere) during the return period,
(k) details of any continuing professional education undertaken by the physiotherapist during the return period,
(l) such other information as may be prescribed by the regulations.
The Board may require a return under this section to be verified by statutory declaration.
The regulations may provide that subsection (1) (a) does not apply in respect of particular offences.
In this section:
A registered physiotherapist must notify the Board in writing within 7 days after:
(a) the physiotherapist is convicted of an offence or made the subject of a sex/violence criminal finding for an offence, in this State or elsewhere, giving details of the conviction or criminal finding and any penalty imposed for the offence, or
(b) criminal proceedings are commenced against the physiotherapist, in this State or elsewhere, in respect of a sex/violence offence alleged to have been committed in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy, or
(c) criminal proceedings are commenced against the physiotherapist, in this State or elsewhere, in respect of a sex/violence offence alleged to have been committed against a minor or to involve child pornography (whether or not alleged to have been committed in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy).
The regulations may provide that subsection (1) (a) does not apply in respect of particular offences.
As soon as practicable after a registered physiotherapist is convicted of an offence or a sex/violence criminal finding is made against a registered physiotherapist, the Clerk or other proper officer of the court must (if the court is aware that the person is a registered physiotherapist) notify the Board of the conviction or criminal finding together with details of any penalty imposed for the offence.
The regulations may provide that this section does not apply in respect of particular offences.
If a registered physiotherapist becomes a mentally incapacitated person, the person prescribed by the regulations must cause notice of that fact to be given to the Registrar in accordance with the regulations.
For the purposes of this Act,
For the purposes of this Act,
(a) any conduct that demonstrates that the knowledge, skill or judgment possessed, or care exercised, by the physiotherapist in the practice of physiotherapy is significantly below the standard reasonably expected of a physiotherapist of an equivalent level of training or experience,
(b) a contravention by the physiotherapist of a provision of this Act or the regulations or of a condition of the physiotherapist’s registration,
(c) a failure without reasonable excuse by the physiotherapist to comply with a direction by the Board to provide information with respect to a complaint under this Part against the physiotherapist,
(d) a failure by the physiotherapist to comply with an order made or a direction given by the Board or the Tribunal under this Act,
(d1) a contravention by the physiotherapist of section 34A (4) (Power of Commission to obtain information, records and evidence) of the Health Care Complaints Act 1993,
(e) any other improper or unethical conduct by a physiotherapist in the course of the practice or purported practice of physiotherapy.
In section 37 and Divisions 3, 4 and 5 of this Part and Divisions 1 and 2 of Part 6 (Appeals and review of disciplinary action), a reference to a complaint includes a reference to a matter arising out of the investigation of a complaint in accordance with this or any other Act.
A complaint may be made under this Act concerning:
(a) the professional conduct of a registered physiotherapist, or
(b) the provision of a physiotherapy service by a registered physiotherapist.
Subsection (1) ensures consistency between this Act and the Health Care Complaints Act 1993 with respect to the kinds of complaints that can be made about registered physiotherapists.
Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), a complaint may be made that a registered physiotherapist:
(a) has, either in or outside New South Wales, been convicted of or made the subject of a criminal finding for an offence, and the circumstances of the offence are such as to render the physiotherapist unfit in the public interest to be registered as a physiotherapist, or
(b) is guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct, or
(c) is not competent to practise physiotherapy, or
(d) suffers from an impairment, or
(e) is not of good character.
A complaint need not be made in terms that are strictly in accordance with the terminology of this section.
In determining for the purposes of this Act whether a physiotherapist is of good character regard may be had to conduct of the physiotherapist before becoming registered as a physiotherapist.
A complaint about a registered physiotherapist may be made and dealt with even though the physiotherapist has ceased to be registered. For that purpose, a reference in this Part to a physiotherapist or registered physiotherapist includes a reference to a person who has ceased to be registered or whose registration is suspended.
Any person (including the Board) can make a complaint.
Complaints are to be made to the Board and are to be lodged with the Registrar.
Complaints may also be made to the Commission.
A complaint must be in writing, must identify the complainant and must contain particulars of the allegations on which it is founded.
(Repealed)
The Board may consider and investigate a complaint even if it does not comply with the requirements of this section (except the requirement that it identify the complainant) but must not proceed to deal with the complaint under this Part until they are complied with.
The Board may require the complainant to provide further particulars of a complaint.
The Board must notify the Commission of any complaint made under this Part and this is to be done as soon as practicable after the complaint is made.
(Repealed)
The Board may make such inquiries concerning a complaint as it thinks fit.
Before the Board deals with or refers a complaint under this Part, the Board and the Commission must consult in order to see if agreement can be reached between them as to the course of action to be taken concerning a complaint.
Division 2 of Part 2 of the Health Care Complaints Act 1993 applies to the consultation and the outcomes of the consultation.
When a complaint is made, the Board may at any time decide:
(a) to refer the complaint for investigation by the Commission, or
(b) to refer the complaint to the Commission for conciliation or to be dealt with under Division 9 of Part 2 of the Health Care Complaints Act 1993, or
(c) to refer the complaint to the Physiotherapy Standards Advisory Committee under Division 3, or
(d) to refer the matter to an Impaired Registrants Panel under Part 5, or
(e) to deal with the complaint by inquiry at a meeting of the Board under Division 4, or
(f) to refer the complaint to the Tribunal, or
(g) to deal with the complaint by directing the physiotherapist to attend counselling, or
(h) to deal with the complaint by providing advice or making recommendations to the physiotherapist, or
(i) to decline to deal with or dismiss the complaint.
If the Commission recommends to the Board in accordance with the Health Care Complaints Act 1993 that a complaint (whether made under that Act or this Act) be dealt with by inquiry at a meeting of the Board under Division 4, the Board must comply with that recommendation (but only if the complaint is of a kind that can be made under this Act).
The Board may decline to deal with a complaint if the physiotherapist concerned has ceased to be registered.
The Board may decline to deal with a complaint if the complainant fails to provide further particulars required by the Board.
A complaint may be withdrawn by the complainant at any time. The Board and the Commission are to consult as to whether the complaint should be proceeded with in the public interest.
The Board is to notify the physiotherapist of any action taken by the Board under this section.
Both the Board and the Commission are under a duty to refer a complaint to the Tribunal if at any time either forms the opinion that it may, if substantiated, provide grounds for the suspension or cancellation of the physiotherapist’s registration.
However, either the Board or the Commission may decide not to refer the complaint to the Tribunal if of the opinion that the allegations on which the complaint is founded (and on which any other pending complaint against the physiotherapist is founded) relate solely or principally to the physical or mental capacity of the physiotherapist to practise physiotherapy.
If the Board decides not to refer the complaint to the Tribunal, the Board must instead deal with the complaint at a meeting of the Board under Division 4. If the Commission decides not to refer the complaint to the Tribunal, the Commission must instead refer the complaint to the Board.
This section does not require the Board or the Commission to refer a complaint that the Board or Commission thinks is frivolous or vexatious.
The Board may, before or while taking any action under this Part or Part 5 (Impairment), by notice to the physiotherapist concerned, require the physiotherapist to undergo an examination at the Board’s expense by a medical practitioner, or other appropriate health professional, specified in the notice, at any reasonable time and place specified in the notice.
A failure by a physiotherapist, without reasonable cause, to comply with a notice given under this section to undergo an examination is, for the purposes of this Part or any inquiry or appeal under this Part, evidence that the physiotherapist does not have sufficient physical and mental capacity to practise physiotherapy.
A medical practitioner or other health professional who conducts an examination under this section is to report to the Board on the results of the examination. The Board is to provide a copy of the report to the physiotherapist.
A person must not directly or indirectly make a record of or divulge to any person any information contained in a report to the Board under this section that has come to the person’s notice in the exercise of the person’s functions under this Act, except for the purpose of exercising functions under this Act.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
A person cannot be required in civil proceedings in any court to produce or permit access to any report made to the Board under this section or to divulge the contents of any such report.
In this section:
The Board is required to give notice of any order made in respect of a registered physiotherapist under this Act, or the placing of conditions on the registration of a registered physiotherapist, to the following persons:
(a) the employer (if any) of the physiotherapist concerned,
(b) the chief executive officer (however described) of any public health organisation (within the meaning of the Health Services Act 1997) in respect of which the physiotherapist concerned is a visiting practitioner or is otherwise accredited,
(c) the chief executive officer (however described) of any private health facility (within the meaning of the Private Health Facilities Act 2007) in respect of which the physiotherapist concerned is accredited,
(d) the chief executive officer (however described) of any nursing home (within the meaning of the Public Health Act 1991) in respect of which the physiotherapist concerned is accredited.
The notice is to be given within 7 days after:
(a) in the case of an order made or conditions imposed by the Board—the date the order is made or the conditions are imposed, or
(b) in any other case—the date the Board is given a copy of the decision of the body that made the order or imposed the conditions.
The notice is to include such information as the Board considers appropriate.
The Board may refer a complaint to the Committee only if the Commission has decided not to investigate the complaint.
A complaint may not be referred to the Committee if it is a complaint that the physiotherapist is not of good character or has been convicted of or made the subject of a criminal finding for an offence.
This section does not operate to limit the Committee in the exercise of its functions under this Division in respect of any matter that arises in the course of the Committee’s investigation of a complaint.
When a complaint is referred to the Committee, the Committee is to investigate the complaint and may in any particular case encourage the complainant and the physiotherapist against whom the complaint is made to settle the complaint by consent.
The Committee may obtain such physiotherapy, medical, legal, financial or other advice as it thinks necessary or desirable to enable it to exercise its functions.
The Committee may not determine a complaint referred to it except by settlement by consent.
The Committee is to make a report to the Board on a complaint referred to it whether or not it is able to effect settlement of the complaint by consent.
The Committee may, by notice to the physiotherapist who is the subject of a complaint referred to the Committee, require the physiotherapist to undergo skills testing at the Board’s expense by an appropriately qualified person specified in the notice, at any reasonable time and place specified in the notice.
A failure by a physiotherapist, without reasonable cause, to comply with a notice given under this section to undergo skills testing is, for the purposes of this Part or any inquiry or appeal under this Part, evidence that the physiotherapist does not have sufficient skill to practise physiotherapy.
The person who conducts skills testing under this section is to report to the Committee on the results of the examination. The Committee is to provide a copy of the report to the physiotherapist.
A person must not directly or indirectly make a record of or divulge to any person any information contained in a report to the Committee under this section that has come to the person’s notice in the exercise of the person’s functions under this Act, except for the purpose of exercising functions under this Act.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
A person cannot be required in civil proceedings in any court to produce or permit access to any report made to the Committee under this section or to divulge the contents of any such report.
In this section:
The Committee’s report to the Board may include such recommendations with respect to the complaint as the Committee considers appropriate, including (without being limited to) any of the following recommendations:
(a) a recommendation that the Board deal with the complaint by inquiry at a meeting of the Board as a complaint of unsatisfactory professional conduct,
(b) a recommendation that the Board direct the physiotherapist to attend counselling,
(c) a recommendation that the Board dismiss the complaint.
The Board is to provide the physiotherapist and the Commission with a copy of the Committee’s report and recommendations as soon as practicable after the report is made.
The Board must comply with a recommendation of the Committee that the Board deal with the complaint by inquiry at a meeting of the Board as a complaint of unsatisfactory professional conduct.
Otherwise the Board is to allow the Commission and the physiotherapist at least 21 days after they have been provided with a copy of the Committee’s report and recommendations to make submissions in respect of the report and recommendations.
After considering the Committee’s report and recommendations and any submissions made by the physiotherapist or the Commission in respect of the report or recommendations, the Board is to proceed to deal with the complaint as provided by section 36.
This section is subject to section 37 (Serious complaints must be referred to Tribunal).
A complainant and the physiotherapist against whom the complaint is made are not entitled to be legally represented at any appearance before the Committee.
If the Board decides to deal with a complaint by inquiry at a meeting of the Board, the meeting is to be held in accordance with Schedule 3 and this Division.
The Board may be assisted by an Australian lawyer when dealing with a complaint at a meeting of the Board.
The Board is to provide the Commission with a copy of any submission made to the Board by the physiotherapist in respect of the complaint or in respect of any recommendation of the Committee concerning the complaint.
The procedure for the calling of a meeting to deal with a complaint and for the conduct of the meeting is, subject to this Act and the regulations, to be as determined by the Board.
At a meeting to deal with a complaint, the Board:
(a) may inform itself on any matter in such manner as it thinks fit, and
(b) may receive written or oral submissions, and
(c) is to proceed with as little formality and technicality, and as much expedition, as the requirements of this Act and the proper consideration of the complaint permit, and
(d) is not bound by rules of evidence, and
(e) may proceed to deal with the complaint in the absence of the physiotherapist.
The physiotherapist is entitled to attend the meeting during the course of the Board’s inquiry and to make submissions to the Board.
The Committee may, if the Board so requires, make a submission to the Board with respect to the complaint and may for that purpose attend the meeting during the course of the Board’s inquiry.
The Board is to afford the Commission the opportunity to make a submission to the Board with respect to the complaint and the Commission may for that purpose attend the meeting during the course of the Board’s inquiry.
The Committee or the Commission may not be present at the meeting except while actually making a submission in accordance with this section, unless the Board otherwise determines.
Despite subsection (4), the Commission is to be present throughout the Board’s inquiry where the complaint is the subject of a recommendation of the Commission under section 36 (2) that it be dealt with by inquiry at a meeting of the Board under this Division.
The physiotherapist is not entitled to be legally represented at the inquiry but may be accompanied by a support person. The support person can be an Australian lawyer.
The Commission is not entitled to be legally represented at the inquiry.
The Board must, within 30 days of making its decision on a complaint, make available to the complainant, the physiotherapist concerned and such other persons as it thinks fit, a written statement of the decision.
If the Commission made a submission to the Board with respect to the complaint, the Board is to provide the Commission with a copy of the written statement of the decision.
The written statement of a decision must give the reasons for the decision.
The Board is not required to include confidential information in any such statement. If a statement would be false or misleading if it did not include the confidential information, the Board is not required to provide the statement.
When confidential information is not included in the statement of a decision provided to a person or the statement is not provided to a person because of subsection (4), the Board must give a confidential information notice to the person.
A
This section does not affect the power of a court to make an order for the discovery of documents or to require the giving of evidence or the production of documents to a court.
In this section:
(a) has not previously been published or made available to the public when a written statement of a decision to which it is or may be relevant is being prepared, and
(b) relates to the personal or business affairs of a person, other than a person to whom the Board is required (or would, but for subsection (4), be required) to provide a written statement of a decision, and
(c) is information:
(i) that was supplied in confidence, or
(ii) the publication of which would reveal a trade secret, or
(iii) that was provided in compliance with a duty imposed by an enactment, or
(iv) the provision of which by the Board would be in breach of any enactment.
A finding of the Board under this Division is admissible as evidence in any legal proceedings.
The Board or the Tribunal may exercise any power or combination of powers conferred on it by this Division if the Board (pursuant to an inquiry at a meeting of the Board under Division 4) or the Tribunal finds the subject-matter of a complaint of a kind referred to in section 27 (2) to have been proved or the person admits to it in writing to the Board or the Tribunal.
The Board may do any one or more of the following:
(a) caution or reprimand the person,
(b) make an order for the withholding or refunding of part or all of the payment with respect to the fees to be charged or paid for the physiotherapy services that are the subject of the complaint,
(c) order that the person seek and undergo medical or psychiatric treatment or counselling,
(d) direct that such conditions relating to the person’s practice of physiotherapy as it considers appropriate be imposed on the person’s registration,
(e) order that the person complete a specified educational course or courses,
(f) order that the person report on his or her physiotherapy practice at specified times, in a specified manner and to specified persons,
(g) order that the person seek and take advice, in relation to the management of his or her physiotherapy practice, from a specified person or persons.
If the person is not registered, an order or direction can still be given under this section but has effect only so as to prevent the person being registered unless the order is complied with or to require the conditions concerned to be imposed when the person is registered, as appropriate.
The Board may recommend that the registration of a physiotherapist be suspended for a specified period or cancelled if the Board is satisfied (when it finds on a complaint about the physiotherapist) that the physiotherapist does not have sufficient physical and mental capacity to practise physiotherapy.
If the physiotherapist is not registered, a recommendation can be made under this section that the physiotherapist not be re-registered.
The Board makes its recommendation by referring the matter with its recommendation to the Chairperson or to a Deputy Chairperson nominated by the Chairperson.
The Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson may then make an order in the terms recommended or may make such other order as to the suspension or registration of the physiotherapist as the Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson thinks proper based on the findings of the Board.
An order may also provide that an application for review of the order under Division 3 of Part 6 may not be made until after a specified time.
Instead of making an order under this section, the Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson may exercise any power or combination of powers of the Board under this Division.
The Tribunal may exercise any power that the Board can exercise under this Division.
The Tribunal may by order suspend a person’s registration for a specified period or direct that a person’s registration be cancelled if the Tribunal is satisfied (when it finds on a complaint about the person):
(a) that the person is not competent to practise physiotherapy, or
(b) that the person is guilty of professional misconduct, or
(c) that the person has been convicted of or made the subject of a criminal finding for an offence, either in or outside New South Wales, and the circumstances of the offence are such as to render the person unfit in the public interest to practise physiotherapy, or
(d) that the person is not of good character.
An order that a person’s registration be cancelled is an order that the person’s name be removed from the Register or (if the person has already ceased to be registered) that the person not be re-registered.
If the Tribunal makes an order under subsection (2) in respect of a person and it is satisfied that the person poses a substantial risk to the health of members of the public, it may by order (a
(a) prohibit the person from providing health services or specified health services for the period specified in the order or permanently,
(b) place such conditions as the Tribunal thinks appropriate on the provision of health services or specified health services by the person for the period specified in the order or permanently.
Section 10AK (1) of the Public Health Act 1991 provides that it is an offence for a person to provide a health service in contravention of a prohibition order.
If the Tribunal is aware that a person in respect of whom it is proposing to make a prohibition order is registered under a health registration Act other than this Act, the Tribunal is, before making the prohibition order, to notify the board constituted under that other Act of the proposed order and give that board an opportunity to make a submission.
An order may also provide that an application for review of the order under Division 3 of Part 6 may not be made until after a specified time.
The Board must, if at any time it is satisfied that such action is necessary for the purpose of protecting the life or physical or mental health of any person:
(a) by order suspend the registration of a registered physiotherapist for such period (not exceeding 8 weeks) as is specified in the order, or
(b) impose on a registered physiotherapist’s registration such conditions, relating to the physiotherapist’s practising physiotherapy, as it considers appropriate.
The Board may take such action:
(a) whether or not a complaint has been made or referred to the Board about the physiotherapist, and
(b) whether or not proceedings in respect of such a complaint are before the Tribunal.
The Board may at any time alter or remove conditions imposed under this Division.
The Board must, as soon as practicable after taking any action under section 55 and, in any event, within 7 days after taking that action, refer the matter to the Commission for investigation.
The matter is to be dealt with by the Commission as a complaint made to the Commission against the physiotherapist concerned.
The Commission is to investigate the complaint or cause it to be investigated and, as soon as practicable after it has completed its investigation, refer the complaint to the Tribunal or to the Board to be dealt with by inquiry at a meeting of the Board under Division 4.
Section 37 (Serious complaints must be referred to Tribunal) applies in respect of any such action by the Commission.
This section does not apply if the Board takes action against a registered physiotherapist under section 55 because the Board is of the opinion that the physiotherapist suffers from an impairment.
This section applies if the Board takes action against a registered physiotherapist under section 55 because the Board is of the opinion that the physiotherapist suffers from an impairment.
The Board must, as soon as practicable after taking that action and, in any event, within 7 days after taking that action, notify the Commission that it has taken that action.
The Board is to consult with the Commission to see if agreement can be reached as to whether the matter should be:
(a) dealt with as a complaint against the physiotherapist, or
(b) referred to an Impaired Registrants Panel.
The matter is to be dealt with as a complaint against the physiotherapist only if, following that consultation:
(a) the Board and the Commission agree that it should be dealt with as a complaint, or
(b) either the Board or the Commission is of the opinion that the matter should be dealt with as a complaint.
In such a case, the Board is to refer the matter to the Commission and the matter is to be dealt with by the Commission as a complaint made to the Commission against the physiotherapist concerned.
The Commission is to investigate the complaint or cause it to be investigated and, as soon as practicable after it has completed its investigation, refer the complaint to the Tribunal or to the Board to be dealt with by inquiry at a meeting of the Board under Division 4.
Section 37 (Serious complaints must be referred to Tribunal) applies in respect of any such action by the Commission.
If subsection (4) does not apply, the Board is to refer the matter to an Impaired Registrants Panel.
A matter may be referred to an Impaired Registrants Panel under this section even though the physiotherapist has been suspended under section 55. Part 5 applies in respect of such a referral as if the physiotherapist were a registered physiotherapist.
If the Board suspends the registration of a registered physiotherapist under section 55, the Board must notify the Chairperson that it has taken that action as soon as practicable after making the order and, in any event, within 7 days.
A period of suspension imposed by the Board under this Division may be extended, from time to time, by the Board by order for a further period or further periods, each of not more than 8 weeks, but only if:
(a) the extension has been approved in writing by the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson, and
(b) the complaint about the physiotherapist has not been disposed of.
On the expiration of a period of suspension imposed under this Division, the person’s rights and privileges as a registered physiotherapist are revived, subject to any order of the Tribunal on the complaint that is referred to the Tribunal.
This section applies if the Board imposes conditions on the registration of a registered physiotherapist under section 55 and the matter is dealt with as a complaint against the physiotherapist.
The conditions imposed by the Board have effect until the complaint about the physiotherapist is disposed of, or the conditions are removed by the Board, whichever happens first.
This section:
(a) does not prevent conditions being imposed under another provision of this Act, and
(b) is subject to anything done by the Tribunal on an appeal under section 77.
This section applies if the Board imposes conditions on the registration of a registered physiotherapist under section 55 and the matter is referred to an Impaired Registrants Panel.
The conditions imposed by the Board have effect until:
(a) the complaint about the physiotherapist is disposed of if the matter is subsequently dealt with by the Board as a complaint, or
(b) the conditions are removed by the Board,
whichever happens first.
The Board is not required to alter or remove conditions imposed under this Division merely because a physiotherapist agrees to the imposition of conditions on the physiotherapist’s registration pursuant to the recommendations of an Impaired Registrants Panel (as referred to in section 72).
A registered physiotherapist who agrees to the imposition of conditions on the physiotherapist’s registration pursuant to the recommendations of an Impaired Registrants Panel may, by notice in writing to the Board, request that the conditions imposed under this Division be removed or altered.
On receipt of such a request, the Board is to review the matter, and may:
(a) refuse to remove or alter any of the conditions, or
(b) remove or alter the conditions.
The Board is to give the physiotherapist concerned notice in writing of its decision in respect of the request.
The Board may specify in the notice a period in which a further request by the physiotherapist under this section is not permitted. The Board may reject a request that the conditions be removed or altered if it is made during that period.
This section:
(a) does not prevent conditions being imposed under another provision of this Act, and
(b) is subject to anything done by the Tribunal on an appeal under section 77.
The Board may refer any matter to an Impaired Registrants Panel if the Board considers that the matter indicates that a registered physiotherapist suffers from an impairment. This is not limited to matters that are the subject of a complaint to the Board.
If the Board is aware that a complaint has been made to the Commission about a physiotherapist who is the subject of a referral to an Impaired Registrants Panel, the Board is to notify the Commission of the referral.
A person may notify the Board of any matter that the person thinks indicates that a registered physiotherapist suffers or may suffer from an impairment.
If the Commission becomes aware of any matter that the Commission considers indicates that a registered physiotherapist suffers or may suffer from an impairment, the Commission may refer the matter to the Board.
This section does not affect the functions of the Board in relation to a complaint made to the Commission or a matter referred to the Commission for investigation.
An Impaired Registrants Panel is to inquire into any matter referred to it and may obtain reports and other information concerning the matter from any source it considers appropriate.
The Panel may request a registered physiotherapist who is the subject of a matter referred to the Panel by the Board, to attend before the Panel for the purpose of enabling the Panel to obtain information on the matter and make an assessment.
An Impaired Registrants Panel is not to investigate or take any other action in relation to any matter if the Panel is aware that the matter is the subject of an investigation by the Commission, while the investigation is being conducted.
The Board is to give notice to a registered physiotherapist of any proposed inquiry by an Impaired Registrants Panel concerning the physiotherapist. The notice is to include sufficient details of the matters to which the inquiry is to relate.
A registered physiotherapist who is the subject of any inquiry by an Impaired Registrants Panel is entitled to make oral or written representations to the Panel with respect to the matters being or to be the subject of the inquiry.
This section does not prevent the Panel from conducting an inquiry in the absence of the registered physiotherapist to whom it relates, as long as the physiotherapist has been given notice of the inquiry under section 69.
An Impaired Registrants Panel is to make an assessment in respect of each referral to it, based on the results of its inquiry into the matter.
On the basis of its assessment, the Panel may do any one or more of the following things:
(a) counsel the physiotherapist concerned or recommend that he or she undertake specified counselling,
(b) recommend that the physiotherapist concerned agree to conditions being imposed on his or her registration or to having his or her registration suspended for a specified period,
(c) make recommendations to the Board as to any action that the Panel considers should be taken in relation to the matter.
The Panel is to report in writing to the Board on each referral to the Panel. The report is to detail the results of the Panel’s inquiries and assessment in respect of the referral and any action taken by the Panel under this Part in relation to it.
The Board may place conditions on a registered physiotherapist’s registration or suspend the physiotherapist’s registration if:
(a) an Impaired Registrants Panel has recommended that the Board do so, and
(b) the Board is satisfied that the physiotherapist has voluntarily agreed to the recommendation.
A registered physiotherapist who agrees to conditions being imposed on his or her registration or to having his or her registration suspended may, by notice in writing to the Board, request:
(a) that those conditions be removed or altered, or
(b) that the suspension be terminated or shortened.
On receipt of such a request, the Board is to require an Impaired Registrants Panel to review the matter and report in writing to the Board on the results of its review.
If the Panel recommends that the Board refuse to remove or alter any of the conditions, or refuse to terminate or shorten the suspension, the Board may do so.
The Board is to give the physiotherapist concerned notice in writing of its decision in respect of the request.
The Board may specify in the notice a period in which a further request by the physiotherapist under this section is not permitted. The Board may reject a request that the conditions be removed or altered, or that the suspension be terminated or shortened, if it is made during that period.
If an Impaired Registrants Panel recommends that a registered physiotherapist agree to conditions being imposed on his or her registration or to having his or her registration suspended and the physiotherapist fails to agree in accordance with the recommendation, the Board is to deal with the matter that was the subject of the referral to the Panel as a complaint against the physiotherapist.
If the Panel recommends that a matter referred to it be dealt with as a complaint, the Board is to deal with the matter as a complaint against the physiotherapist concerned.
In any other case that the Board thinks it appropriate to do so, the Board may treat a matter that has been referred to a Panel as grounds for a complaint under this Act and may deal with the matter accordingly.
A report by an Impaired Registrants Panel to the Board may not be admitted or used in any civil proceedings before a court.
A person may not be compelled to produce the report or to give evidence in relation to the report or its contents in any such civil proceedings.
A person must not directly or indirectly make a record of or disclose to any person any information contained in a report by an Impaired Registrants Panel to the Board that has come to the person’s notice in the exercise of the person’s functions under this Act, except for the purposes of exercising functions under this Act.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
This section does not prevent the disclosure of such a report to the Commission.
In this section:
When a complaint has been dealt with at a meeting of the Board under Division 4 of Part 4, the physiotherapist or the Commission may appeal to the Tribunal against:
(a) a finding of the Board, or
(b) the exercise of any power by the Board under Division 5 (Disciplinary powers of Board and Tribunal) of Part 4.
An appeal must be made within 28 days (or such longer period as the Chairperson may allow in a particular case) after:
(a) the Board’s written statement of the decision by which the Board’s finding is made is made available to the appellant, or
(b) the exercise of the power against which the appeal is made.
The appeal must be lodged with the Registrar who is to refer it to the Tribunal.
The appeal is to be dealt with by way of rehearing and fresh evidence, or evidence in addition to or in substitution for the evidence received at the meeting of the Board, may be given.
The Tribunal may:
(a) dismiss the appeal, or
(b) make any finding or exercise any power or combination of powers that the Tribunal could have made or exercised if the complaint had been originally referred to the Tribunal.
An appeal under this section does not affect any finding or exercise of power with respect to which it has been made until the Tribunal makes an order on the appeal.
A person may appeal to the Tribunal:
(a) against a suspension or extension of a suspension by the Board under Division 6 (Powers of the Board for the protection of the public) of Part 4, or
(b) against conditions imposed by the Board on the person’s registration under Division 6 of Part 4 or Part 5 or any alteration of those conditions by the Board, or
(c) against a refusal by the Board to alter or remove conditions imposed by the Board under Division 6 of Part 4 in accordance with a request made by the person under section 63, or
(d) against a refusal by the Board to remove or alter conditions imposed on the person’s registration, or to shorten or terminate a suspension, imposed under Part 5 in accordance with a request made by the person under section 73.
An appeal may not be made in respect of a request by a person that is rejected by the Board because it was made during a period in which the request was not permitted under section 63 or 73.
An appeal must be made within 28 days (or such longer period as the Chairperson may allow in a particular case) after notice of the action taken by the Board, or the Board’s refusal, is given to the person.
An appeal is to be lodged with the Registrar who is to refer it to the Tribunal.
On an appeal, the Tribunal may, by order, do any of the following:
(a) dismiss the appeal,
(b) remove or alter the conditions to which the physiotherapist’s registration is subject (including by imposing new conditions on the physiotherapist’s registration),
(c) terminate or shorten the period of the suspension concerned.
The Tribunal’s order must not cause a suspension or conditions imposed by the Board to have effect beyond the day on which any related complaint about the person is disposed of.
An appeal under this section does not affect any suspension or conditions with respect to which it has been made until the Tribunal makes an order on the appeal.
When a complaint is dealt with at a meeting of the Board under Division 4 of Part 4, the physiotherapist or the Commission may appeal with respect to a point of law to the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson nominated by the Chairperson.
An appeal may be made in accordance with the regulations during the meeting of the Board to deal with the complaint or within the period after the date of giving of notice of the meeting and before the commencement of the meeting.
If the meeting of the Board to deal with the complaint has not been completed when an appeal is made, the Board must not continue to deal with the complaint until the appeal has been disposed of.
The Board must not make any decision that is inconsistent with the Chairperson’s or Deputy Chairperson’s determination with respect to the point of law.
An appeal with respect to a point of law may be made to the Supreme Court by the physiotherapist or the complainant during an inquiry on a complaint conducted by the Tribunal or after the complaint is referred to the Tribunal and before the commencement of the inquiry, but can only be made with the leave of the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson.
If an inquiry conducted by the Tribunal has not been completed when an appeal with respect to a point of law is made, the inquiry before the Tribunal is not to continue until the appeal has been disposed of.
The Tribunal must not make any decision that is inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s determination with respect to the point of law when it recommences the inquiry.
A physiotherapist about whom a complaint is referred to the Tribunal, or the complainant, may appeal to the Supreme Court against:
(a) a decision of the Tribunal with respect to a point of law, or
(b) the exercise of any power by the Tribunal under Division 5 (Disciplinary powers of Board and Tribunal) of Part 4.
The appeal must be made within 28 days (or such longer period as the Court may allow in a particular case) after the Tribunal’s written statement of the decision by which the Tribunal’s finding is made is made available to the appellant.
The Supreme Court may stay any order made by the Tribunal, on such terms as the Court sees fit, until such time as the Court determines the appeal.
In determining the appeal, the Supreme Court may:
(a) dismiss the appeal, or
(b) make such order as it thinks proper having regard to the merits of the case and the public welfare, and in doing so may exercise any one or more of the powers of the Tribunal under this Act.
If the Court dismisses an appeal against an order of the Tribunal, the Court may by order direct that the Tribunal’s order is to be taken to include provision that an application for its review under Division 3 may not be made until after a specified time.
A person may apply to the appropriate review body for a review of a prohibition order in respect of the person or of an order of the Board, the Chairperson or a Deputy Chairperson, the Tribunal or the Supreme Court:
(a) that the registration of the person is suspended, or
(b) that the person’s name be removed from the Register or that the person not be re-registered, or
(c) that conditions be imposed on the person’s registration.
A person may also apply to the appropriate review body for a review of an order made under this Division.
An application for review of an order may not be made:
(a) while the terms of the order provide that an application for review may not be made, or
(b) while an appeal under this Part to the Tribunal or the Supreme Court in respect of the same matter is pending.
The
An application for review must be lodged with the Registrar who is to refer it to the appropriate review body.
The appropriate review body is to conduct an inquiry into an application for review and may then do any of the following:
(a) dismiss the application,
(b) by its order terminate or shorten the period of the suspension concerned,
(c) make a reinstatement order,
(d) make an order altering the conditions to which the person’s registration is subject (including by imposing new conditions),
(e) by its order terminate or shorten the period of a prohibition order or alter the conditions to which the person is subject under a prohibition order (including by imposing new conditions).
A
The Commission is entitled to make submissions in respect of the application at the inquiry into the application.
The Board is to take such action as may be necessary to give effect to a reinstatement order.
The order on a review under this section may also provide that the order is not to be reviewed under this Division until after a specified time.
A review under this Division is a review to determine the appropriateness, at the time of the review, of the order concerned.
The review is not to reconsider the decision to make the order or any findings made in connection with the making of that decision, unless significant fresh evidence is produced that was not previously available for consideration and the appropriate review body is of the opinion that, in the circumstances of the case, that decision or any such finding should be reconsidered.
There is constituted by this Act a body corporate under the corporate name of the Physiotherapists Registration Board.
The Board has the following functions:
(a) such functions as are conferred or imposed on the Board by or under this or any other Act,
(b) to promote and maintain standards of physiotherapy practice in New South Wales,
(c) to advise the Minister on matters relating to the registration of physiotherapists, standards of physiotherapy practice and any other matter arising under or related to this Act or the regulations,
(d) to publish and distribute information concerning this Act and the regulations to physiotherapists, consumers and other interested persons.
The Board is to exercise its functions in a manner that is consistent with the object of this Act.
The Board cannot employ any staff.
Staff may be employed under Chapter 1A of the Public Sector Employment and Management Act 2002 in the Government Service to enable the Board to exercise its functions.
The Board is to consist of 11 members, of whom:
(a) 3 are to be registered physiotherapists elected by registered physiotherapists in accordance with the regulations, and
(b) 8 are to be appointed by the Governor in accordance with subsection (2).
The appointed members are to be:
(a) 1 person nominated by the Minister, being an officer of the Department of Health or an employee of an area health service, statutory health corporation or affiliated health organisation within the meaning of the Health Services Act 1997,
(b) 1 registered physiotherapist nominated by the Minister from a panel of physiotherapists nominated by the Australian Physiotherapy Association (NSW), and such other bodies representing physiotherapists as may be determined by the Minister,
(c) 1 registered physiotherapist nominated by the Minister, being a registered physiotherapist involved in the tertiary education of persons for qualification in New South Wales as physiotherapists,
(d) 1 registered physiotherapist practising physiotherapy in New South Wales nominated by the Minister of the Minister’s own choosing,
(e) 3 persons nominated by the Minister, at least 2 of whom are not registered physiotherapists and are nominated to represent the community,
(f) 1 Australian lawyer nominated by the Minister.
If the panel of physiotherapists required to be nominated for the purposes of subsection (2) (b) is not nominated within such time or in such manner as may be specified by the Minister by notice to the association or associations concerned, the Governor may instead appoint as a member a person nominated by the Minister.
(Repealed)
The Board may establish committees to assist it in connection with the exercise of any of its functions.
It does not matter that any or all of the members of a committee are not members of the Board.
A member of a committee, while sitting on the committee, is entitled to be paid by the Board such amount as the Minister from time to time determines in respect of the member.
The procedure for the calling of meetings of a committee and for the conduct of business at those meetings may be determined by the Board or (subject to any determination of the Board) by the committee.
The Board may delegate any of its functions (other than this power of delegation and the function of authorising by resolution the expenditure of money from the Physiotherapy Education and Research Account) to:
(a) the President, or
(b) the Deputy President, or
(c) a committee consisting of 2 or more members of the Board, or
(d) the Registrar or any other member of staff of the Board.
The Board must not delegate any of its functions under Part 4 (Complaints and disciplinary proceedings) to the Registrar or any other member of the staff of the Board.
The Registrar may delegate to a member of the staff of the Board the exercise of:
(a) any of the functions of the Registrar under this Act, other than this power of delegation, or
(b) any functions delegated to the Registrar by the Board, unless the Board otherwise provides in its instrument of delegation to the Registrar.
(Section 92)
The Minister may call the first meeting of the Board in such manner as the Minister thinks fit.
The procedure for the calling of meetings of the Board and for the conduct of business at those meetings is, subject to this Act and the regulations, to be as determined by the Board.
The quorum for a meeting of the Board is 6 members.
The President or, in the absence of the President, the Deputy President or, in the absence of both of them, another member of the Board elected to chair the meeting by the members present, is to preside at a meeting of the Board.
The person presiding at any meeting of the Board has a deliberative vote and, in the event of an equality of votes, has a second or casting vote.
A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting of the Board at which a quorum is present is the decision of the Board.
The Board must cause full and accurate minutes to be kept of the proceedings of each meeting of the Board.
In any legal proceedings, proof is not required (until evidence is given to the contrary) of:
(a) the constitution of the Board, or
(b) any resolution of the Board, or
(c) the appointment of, or the holding of office by, any member of the Board, or
(d) the presence of a quorum at any meeting of the Board.
(Section 96)
The member referred to in section 95 (2) (a) is to be the Chairperson of the Committee.
Subject to this Schedule, a member of the Committee holds office for such period, not exceeding 4 years, as may be specified in the instrument of appointment of the member, but is eligible (if otherwise qualified) for re-appointment.
A member of the Committee is entitled to be paid such remuneration (including travelling and subsistence allowances) as the Minister may from time to time determine in respect of the member.
If the office of any member of the Committee becomes vacant, a person is, subject to this Act, to be appointed to fill the vacancy.
A member of the Committee is to be taken to have vacated office if the member:
(a) dies, or
(b) absents himself or herself from 4 consecutive meetings of the Committee of which reasonable notice has been given to the member personally or in the ordinary course of post, except on leave granted by the Minister or unless, before the expiration of 4 weeks after the last of those meetings, the member is excused by the Minister for being absent from those meetings, or
(c) becomes bankrupt, applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, compounds with his or her creditors or makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for their benefit, or
(d) becomes a mentally incapacitated person, or
(e) is convicted in New South Wales of an offence that is punishable by imprisonment for 12 months or more or is convicted elsewhere than in New South Wales of an offence that, if committed in New South Wales, would be an offence so punishable, or
(f) resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed to the Minister, or
(g) is removed from office by the Minister under subclause (3).
Without limiting the generality of subclause (1), a member who is appointed under section 95 (2) (a) or (b) and who ceases to be a registered physiotherapist is to be taken to have vacated office.
The Minister may remove a member from office.
The procedure for the calling of meetings of the Committee and for the conduct of business at those meetings is, subject to this Act, to be as determined by the Committee.
The quorum for a meeting of the Committee is 3 members.
A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting of the Committee at which a quorum is present is the decision of the Committee.
The Chairperson of the Committee or, in the absence of the Chairperson, another member of the Committee elected to chair the meeting by the members present, is to preside at a meeting of the Committee.
The person presiding at any meeting of the Committee has a deliberative vote and, in the event of an equality of votes, has a second or casting vote.
(Section 112)
In proceedings before it, the Tribunal is not bound to observe the rules of law governing the admission of evidence, but may inform itself of any matter in such manner as it thinks fit.
The Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson may summon a person to appear in proceedings before the Tribunal, to give evidence and to produce such documents (if any) as are referred to in the summons.
The person presiding at the proceedings may require a person appearing in the proceedings to produce a document.
The Tribunal may, in proceedings before it, take evidence on oath or affirmation and, for that purpose a member of the Tribunal:
(a) may require a person appearing in the proceedings to give evidence either to take an oath or to make an affirmation in a form approved by the person presiding, and
(b) may administer an oath to or take an affirmation from a person so appearing in the proceedings.
A person served with a summons to appear in any such proceedings and to give evidence must not, without reasonable excuse:
(a) fail to attend as required by the summons, or
(b) fail to attend from day to day unless excused, or released from further attendance, by a member of the Tribunal.
A person appearing in proceedings to give evidence must not, without reasonable excuse:
(a) when required to be sworn or to affirm—fail to comply with the requirement, or
(b) fail to answer a question that the person is required to answer by the person presiding, or
(c) fail to produce a document that the person is required to produce by this clause.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units.
A member of the Tribunal may, by notice in writing served on a person, require the person:
(a) to attend, at a time and place specified in the notice, before a person specified in the notice, being a member of the Tribunal or a person authorised by the Tribunal in that behalf, and
(b) to produce, at that time and place, to the person so specified a document specified in the notice.
A person who fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a notice served on the person under this clause is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units.
The Tribunal may receive and admit on production, as evidence in any proceedings, such of the following as the Tribunal considers relevant to the proceedings:
(a) the judgment and findings of any court (whether civil or criminal and whether or not of New South Wales) or tribunal,
(b) the verdict or findings of a jury of any such court,
(c) a certificate of the conviction of or the making of a criminal finding in respect of any person,
(d) a transcript of the depositions or of shorthand notes, duly certified by the Registrar or clerk of the court or tribunal as correct, of the evidence of witnesses taken in any such court or tribunal.
The Tribunal may in proceedings before it deal with one or more complaints about a registered physiotherapist.
If, during any such proceedings, it appears to the Tribunal that, having regard to any matters that have arisen, another complaint could have been made against the physiotherapist concerned:
(a) whether instead of or in addition to the complaint that was made, and
(b) whether or not by the same complainant,
the Tribunal may take that other complaint to have been referred to it and may deal with it in the same proceedings.
If another complaint is taken to have been referred to the Tribunal under subclause (2), the complaint may be dealt with after such an adjournment (if any) as is, in the opinion of the Tribunal, just and equitable in the circumstances.
The person presiding in proceedings before the Tribunal may, if the person presiding thinks it appropriate in the particular circumstances of the case (and whether or not on the request of a complainant, the physiotherapist concerned or any other person):
(a) direct that the name of any witness is not to be disclosed in the proceedings, or
(b) direct that all or any of the following matters are not to be published:
(i) the name and address of any witness,
(ii) the name and address of a complainant,
(iii) the name and address of a physiotherapist,
(iv) any specified evidence,
(v) the subject-matter of a complaint.
A direction may be amended or revoked at any time by the person presiding.
A direction may be given before or during proceedings, but must not be given before the proceedings unless notice is given of the time and place appointed by the person presiding for consideration of the matter to:
(a) a person who requested the direction, and
(b) the complainant or the physiotherapist concerned, as appropriate, and
(c) such other persons as the person presiding thinks fit.
For the purposes of this clause, a reference to the name of any person includes a reference to any information, picture or other material that identifies the person or is likely to lead to the identification of the person.
A person who contravenes a direction given under this clause is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty: 150 penalty units in the case of a body corporate and 20 penalty units in any other case.
Every document requiring authentication by the Tribunal may be sufficiently authenticated without the seal of the Tribunal, if signed by the Chairperson or by a member of the Tribunal authorised to do so by the Chairperson.
In any proceedings before the Tribunal, a person appointed by the Commission:
(a) may act as nominal complainant in place of the actual complainant, and
(b) when so acting, is, for the purposes of this Act and the regulations, to be taken to be the person who made the complaint.
A reference in this Act to a complainant includes a reference to a nominal complainant.
Without limiting the operation of clause 8, the Director-General personally (or an officer of the Department of Health appointed by the Director-General) or a person appointed by the Commission may intervene, and has a right to be heard, in any proceedings before the Tribunal.
The Director-General and the Commission may be represented by an Australian lawyer.
It is the duty of the Tribunal to hear inquiries and appeals under this Act and to determine those inquiries and appeals expeditiously.
Without affecting the generality of subclause (1), the Tribunal may postpone or adjourn proceedings before it as it thinks fit.
A certificate, purporting to have been signed by the Registrar, to the effect that:
(a) a person specified in the certificate was or was not a registered physiotherapist at a time or during a period so specified, or
(b) the name of a person specified in the certificate was removed from the Register at a time so specified, or
(c) the registration of a person specified in the certificate was suspended from a time so specified and for a period so specified, or
(d) a condition, particulars of which are set out in the certificate, was, at a time or during a period so specified, imposed on the registration of a person so specified or revoked or not in force,
is, without proof of the signature of the person by whom the certificate purports to have been signed, to be received by the Tribunal and all courts as evidence of that fact.
The Tribunal may decide not to conduct an inquiry, or at any time to terminate an inquiry or appeal, if:
(a) a complainant fails to comply with a requirement made of the complainant by the Tribunal, or
(b) the person about whom the complaint is made ceases to be a registered physiotherapist.
The Tribunal must not conduct or continue any inquiry or any appeal if the physiotherapist concerned dies.
The Tribunal may order the complainant, if any, the registered physiotherapist concerned, or any other person entitled to appear (whether as of right or because leave to appear has been granted) at any inquiry or appeal before the Tribunal to pay such costs to such person as the Tribunal may determine.
When an order for costs has taken effect, the Tribunal is, on application by the person to whom the costs have been awarded, to issue a certificate setting out the terms of the order and stating that the order has taken effect.
The person in whose favour costs are awarded may file the certificate in the District Court, together with an affidavit by the person as to the amount of the costs unpaid, and the Registrar of the District Court is to enter judgment for the amount unpaid together with any fees paid for filing the certificate.
(Repealed)
(Section 136)
In this Schedule:
The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:
• this Act
• Health Legislation Amendment (Unregistered Health Practitioners) Act 2006 (but only to the extent that it amends this Act)
Such a provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later day.
To the extent to which such a provision takes effect from a date that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the provision does not operate so as:
(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 that 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 the date of that publication.
A person who, immediately before the repeal of the 1945 Act, held office as a member of the old Board:
(a) ceases to hold office as such on that repeal, and
(b) is eligible (if otherwise qualified) to be appointed or elected as a member of the new Board.
Despite subclause (1), a person who, immediately before the commencement of section 86, held office as an elected member of the old Board commences a new term of office for a term of 4 years as an elected member of the new Board on the commencement of section 86.
A person who ceases to hold office as a member of the old Board because of the operation of this Act is not entitled to be paid any remuneration or compensation because of ceasing to hold that office.
Nothing in subclause (2) prevents a member who holds office as an elected member of the new Board as a result of the operation of that subclause from being removed from office under clause 7 of Schedule 2.
Unless the regulations otherwise provide, anything done by or in relation to the old Board and having effect immediately before the dissolution of the old Board is taken to have been done by or in relation to the new Board.
For the purpose only of enabling the new Board to be constituted in accordance with this Act on or after (but not before) the commencement of section 86 (Constitution of the Board), appointments may be made under this Act, and anything else may be done, before that commencement, as if the whole of this Act commenced on the date of assent, but so that no appointment as a member of the new Board as so constituted takes effect before the commencement of section 86.
As soon as practicable after the commencement of this clause, the new Board is to compile the Register from the relevant information and particulars entered in the register kept under section 20 of the 1945 Act in respect of persons registered as physiotherapists immediately before that commencement.
A person who is a registered physiotherapist under the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is on that commencement taken to be registered under this Act. Registration under this Act is subject to the same conditions (if any) as the person’s registration under the 1945 Act was subject immediately before that commencement.
A certificate of provisional registration as a physiotherapist in force under the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to have been granted under this Act.
An approval by the Board for a person to practise physiotherapy in force under section 21C of the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to be a certificate of temporary registration granted under this Act for the same period, and subject to the same conditions (if any).
A certificate of conditional registration as a physiotherapist in force under section 21B (1) of the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to be a certificate of full registration as a physiotherapist granted under this Act subject to the condition referred to in section 13 of this Act (and any other conditions to which the certificate of conditional registration was subject).
A certificate of conditional registration as a physiotherapist granted provisionally under section 21B (2) of the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to be a certificate of provisional registration as a physiotherapist granted under this Act subject to the condition referred to in section 13 of this Act (and any other conditions to which the certificate of conditional registration was subject).
A period of practice as a physiotherapist undertaken as the holder of a certificate of conditional registration under the 1945 Act before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to be a period of practice in an approved health institution as a physiotherapist registered under this Act for the purposes of section 13 of this Act.
An institution for which an approval of the Minister was in force under section 21B (3) (a) of the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken, on that commencement, to be an approved health institution for the purposes of section 13 of this Act.
Nothing in subclause (7) prevents the Board from revoking an approval of an institution that is taken, by virtue of subclause (7), to be an approved health institution.
A fee paid or which remains unpaid under a provision of the 1945 Act immediately before its repeal is taken, on commencement of the relevant provision of this Act, to have been paid or to remain unpaid under the provision of this Act that corresponds to that provision and is taken to have been so paid or to so remain unpaid for or in relation to the same period as that which applied to the fee under the 1945 Act.
An application for registration as a physiotherapist under the 1945 Act which had not been determined by the old Board before the repeal of that Act is taken to be an application for registration under this Act.
An appeal to the District Court under section 24E of the 1945 Act that was pending immediately before the repeal of that Act is to be continued and disposed of as if, except as provided by subclause (2), this Act had not been enacted.
The decision of the Court on any such appeal is final, and binding on the new Board and the appellant and for the purposes of this Act is taken to be the final decision of the new Board.
A complaint made to the old Board concerning the conduct of a registered physiotherapist under the 1945 Act and pending immediately before the repeal of that Act is, to the extent that the conduct concerned could be the subject of a complaint under this Act, to be dealt with as a complaint under this Act, except as provided by this clause.
If a complaint pending under the 1945 Act on the commencement of this clause is the subject of an inquiry by a Professional Standards Committee or an inquiry by or appeal before the Physiotherapists Registration Board under that Act immediately before that commencement:
(a) the complaint or appeal is to continue to be dealt with and determined under the 1945 Act as if the 1945 Act had not been repealed, and
(b) any finding, order, direction, decision or determination arising from or in connection with the determination of the complaint or appeal under the 1945 Act has effect for the purposes of the corresponding provision of this Act, and
(c) the 1945 Act continues to apply as if it had not been repealed for the purposes of any appeal against any such order, direction, decision or determination.
This clause applies for the purposes of this Act and for the purposes of the Health Care Complaints Act 1993 (including any conciliation under that Act) in its application to any complaint or investigation pending under the 1945 Act immediately before the repeal of the 1945 Act.
A complaint or investigation may be made under this Act with respect to conduct or any other matter or thing that occurred before, or partly before and partly after, the commencement of the provisions of this Act under which the complaint or investigation is made.
Any finding, order, direction, decision or determination under sections 24–25A of the 1945 Act is, to the extent that it had any operation immediately before the commencement of this clause, taken to have been made under the corresponding provision of this Act and is to be given effect to accordingly.
Money standing to the credit of the Physiotherapy Education and Research Account under the 1945 Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is to be paid to the credit of the Physiotherapy Education and Research Account under this Act.
Unless the regulations otherwise provide, on and from the commencement of this clause, a reference in any other Act, in any instrument made under any Act or in any other instrument of any kind:
(a) to the old Board is to be read as a reference to the new Board, and
(b) to the Secretary under the 1945 Act is to be read as a reference to the Registrar under this Act, and
(c) to the register referred to in section 20 of the 1945 Act is to be read as a reference to the Register under this Act, and
(d) to the registration of a person as a registered physiotherapist under the 1945 Act is to be read as a reference to the registration of the person as a physiotherapist under this Act.
In this Part:
The Tribunal may make a prohibition order under section 54 (3A) with respect to either or both of the following:
(a) conduct or any other matter or thing that occurred before, or partly before and partly after, that subsection was inserted by the amending Act,
(b) a complaint that has been made but not fully dealt with before that subsection was inserted by the amending Act.
Section 116 (4), as substituted by the amending Act, applies only in respect of a statement of a decision that is given after the commencement of that subsection.
Section 122A, as inserted by the amending Act, extends to a person who was, immediately before the commencement of that section, subject to an order of the Tribunal or the Supreme Court that the person’s registration be cancelled or that the person not be re-registered.
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