the Medical Act definition
Examples of the Medical Act in a sentence
The authority of the NLMA to bargain is limited to the authority set out in Section 5 of the Medical Act.
The NLMA has authority pursuant to the Medical Act to negotiate on behalf of physicians.
Subject to clause 217, no medical practitioner may perform medical services under the Contract unless the medical practitioner is: 216.1 included in the medical performers list for a Local Health Board in Wales; 216.2 not suspended from that list or from the Medical Register; and 216.3 not subject to interim suspension under section 41A of the Medical Act 1983 (interim order).
The Term means a medical practitioner who is registered under the Medical Act of the Province of Ontario or such similar statute or law as governs the practice of medicine in the jurisdiction in which any medical, surgical or diagnostic services are rendered to an employee or dependent.
All arrangements for collaboration and exchange of information set out in the Memorandum of Understanding and any supplementary agreements will take account of and comply with the Data Protection Act (1998), any relevant data protection legalisation in force, Health and Social Care Act (2012), the Medical Act (1983) and any current and approved JCCP and GMC codes of practice, frameworks or other policies relating to confidential personal information.
The GMC has a statutory duty under Section 35B(4) of the Medical Act 1983 to publish, in such a manner as it sees fit, a range of decisions by Medical Practitioner Tribunals, Interim Orders Tribunals, warnings given by the Investigation Committee, and undertakings agreed with doctors.
The GMC has a statutory duty under Section 35B(4) of the Medical Act 1983 to publish, in such a manner as it sees fit, a range of decisions by medical practitioner tribunals, interim orders tribunals the Investigation Committee, and undertakings agreed with doctors.
The GMC has a statutory duty under Section 35B(4) of the Medical Act 1983 to publish, in such a manner as it sees fit, a range of decisions by fitness to practise panels, interim orders panels, the Investigation Committee, and undertakings agreed with doctors.
Those three members must comprise— o one person with clinical expertise in a profession regulated by the Medical Act 1983; o one person with clinical expertise in a profession regulated by the Nursing and Midwifery Order 2001; and o one person with clinical expertise in another regulated profession.
This processing is authorised by law under section 1(1) of the Medical Act 1983 with Fitness to Practice authority outlined in sections 35A (1) and 35C of the Medical Act 1983.