Part IIE+W+S General Medical, General Dental, General Ophthalmic, and Pharmaceutical Services
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
General medical servicesE+W+S
29Arrangements and regulations for general medical services.E+W+S
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Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
[29A] Medical lists.E+W+S
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[29B] Vacancies for medical practitioners.E+W+S
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30. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E+W+S
31 Requirement of suitable experience.E+W+S
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32 Regulations as to s. 31.E+W+S
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33 Distribution of general medical services.E+W+S
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34 Regulations for Medical Practices Committee.E+W+S
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General dental servicesE+W+S
35 Arrangements for general dental services.E+W+S
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36Regulations as to s. 35.E+W+S
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37 Dental Estimates Board.E+W+S
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General ophthalmic servicesE+W+S
38 Arrangements for general ophthalmic services.E+W+S
[(1)][It is the duty [of every Primary Care Trust and] of every [Health Authority], in accordance with regulations, to arrange as respects their [area]] with medical practitioners having the prescribed qualifications, [and ophthalmic opticians for securing the testing][by them of the sight—
(a)of a child;
(b)of a person whose resources fall to be treated under the regulations as being less than his requirements or as being equal to his requirements; or
(c)of a person of such other description as may be prescribed.
(2)In this section—
(a)a person who is under the age of 16 years; or
(b)a person who is under the age of 19 years and receiving qualifying full-time education; and
(a)“recognised educational establishment” means an establishment recognised by the Secretary of State as being, or as comparable to, a school, college or university; and
(b)regulations may prescribe the circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated as receiving full-time instruction.
(3)Regulations under this section may direct how a person’s resources and requirements are to be calculated and, without prejudice to the generality of this subsection, may direct that they shall be calculated—
(a)by a method set out in the regulations;
(b)by a method described by reference to a method of calculating or estimating income or capital specified in an enactment other than this section or in an instrument made under an Act of Parliament or by reference to such a method but subject to prescribed modifications;
(c)by reference to an amount applicable for the purposes of a payment under an Act of Parliament or an instrument made under an Act of Parliament; or
(d)by reference to the person’s being or having been entitled to payment under an Act of Parliament or an instrument made under an Act of Parliament.
(4)Descriptions of persons may be prescribed for the purposes of subsection (1) above by reference to any criterion and, without prejudice to the generality of this subsection, by reference to any of the following criteria—
(a)their age;
(b)the fact that a prescribed person or a prescribed body accepts them as suffering from a prescribed medical condition;
(c)the fact that a prescribed person or a prescribed body accepts that a prescribed medical condition from which they suffer arose in prescribed circumstances;
(d)their receipt of benefit in money or in kind under any enactment or their entitlement to receive any such benefit; and
(e)the receipt of any such benefit by other persons satisfying prescribed conditions or the entitlement of other persons satisfying prescribed conditions to receive such benefits.
(5)Regulations which refer to an Act of Parliament or an instrument made under an Act of Parliament may direct that the reference is to be construed as a reference to that Act or instrument—
(a)as it has effect at the time when the regulations are made; or
(b)both as it has effect at that time and as amended subsequently.
(6)Regulations may provide that a person—
(a)whose sight is tested by a person who provides general ophthalmic services; and
(b)who is shown during the testing or within a prescribed time after it to fall within subsection (1) above,
shall be taken for the purposes of the testing to have so fallen immediately before his sight was tested; and the testing shall be treated—
(i)for the purposes of any arrangements under this section;
(ii)for the purposes of remuneration in respect of the testing; and
(iii)for any such other purpose as may be prescribed,
as a testing of sight under this Act.
(7)Regulations shall define the services for the provision of which arrangements under this section are to be made and the services so defined are in this Act referred to as “general ophthalmic services”.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
39Regulations as to s. 38.E+W+S
[(1)] Regulations may provide as to the arrangements to be made under section 38 above, and shall include provision—
[(a)for the preparation and publication by each Primary Care Trust and by each Health Authority of a list of medical practitioners and a list of ophthalmic opticians who undertake to provide general ophthalmic services for persons in the area of the Primary Care Trust or Health Authority;]
(b)for conferring a right, subject [to [subsections (2) and (3) below, to] any provision made under section 43C below and] to the provisions of this [Part of this] Act relating to the disqualification of practitioners, on any medical practitioner having the prescribed qualifications, [or ophthalmic] optician who wishes to be included in the appropriate list, to be so included;
(c)for conferring on any person a right to choose in accordance with the prescribed procedure the medical practitioner or ophthalmic optician by whom his sight is to be tested, or from whom any prescription for the supply of optical appliances is to be obtained . . . ;
(d)for the removal from the list of medical practitioners, [or ophthalmic] opticians undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services for persons in any [area] of the name of any one in whose case it has been determined in such manner as may be prescribed that he has never provided, or has ceased to provide, such general ophthalmic services for persons in that [area].
[(2)The regulations may, in particular, make provision in relation to—
(a)grounds on which a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, or must, refuse to include a medical practitioner or an ophthalmic optician in a list referred to in subsection (1)(a) (including grounds corresponding to the conditions referred to in section 49F(2), (3) and (4) as read with section 49H below);
(b)information which must be supplied to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by a person included or seeking inclusion in such a list (or by arrangement with him);
(c)the supply to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by an individual—
(i)who is included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list, or
(ii)who is a director of a body corporate or who is a member of a limited liability partnership included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list,
of a criminal conviction certificate under section 112 of the Police Act 1997 (c. 50), a criminal record certificate under section 113 of that Act or an enhanced criminal record certificate under section 115 of that Act;
(d)grounds on which a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may defer a decision whether or not to include a person in such a list;
(e)the disclosure by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, to prescribed persons or persons of prescribed descriptions, of information of a prescribed description about applicants for inclusion in such a list, and refusals by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to include them; and
(f)criteria to be applied in making decisions under the regulations.
(3)If regulations made by virtue of subsection (2)(a) provide that a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may refuse to include a person in such a list, they must also provide for an appeal (by way of redetermination) to the FHSAA against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] .]
[(4)The regulations may include provision as to the making of declarations about—
(a)financial interests;
(b)gifts above a prescribed value; and
(c)other benefits received.
(5)Before making regulations by virtue of subsection (4), the Secretary of State must consult such organisations as he thinks fit appearing to him to represent persons providing general ophthalmic services.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
40 Medical practitioners with qualifications prescribed under s. 38.E+W+S
The power conferred by section 38 above (in relation to general ophthalmic services) to prescribe the qualifications to be possessed by any medical practitioner includes a power—
(a)to prescribe a requirement that the practitioner shall show to the satisfaction of a committee recognised by the Secretary of State for the purpose that he possesses such qualifications, including qualifications as to experience, as may be mentioned in the regulations; and
(b)to confer on a person who is dissatisfied with the determination of such a committee, a right of appeal to a committee appointed by the Secretary of State, and to provide for any matter for which it appears to the Secretary of State to be requisite or expedient to provide in consequence of the conferring of that right.
Pharmaceutical servicesE+W+S
[41 Arrangements for pharmaceutical servicesE+W+S
(1)It is the duty [of every Primary Care Trust and] of every Health Authority, in accordance with regulations which shall be made for the purpose, to arrange as respects their area for the provision to persons who are in that area of—
(a)proper and sufficient drugs and medicines and listed appliances which are ordered for those persons by a medical practitioner in pursuance of his functions in the health service, the Scottish health service, the Northern Ireland health service or the armed forces of the Crown;
(b)proper and sufficient drugs and medicines which are ordered for those persons by a dental practitioner in pursuance of—
(i)his functions in the health service, the Scottish health service or the Northern Ireland health service (other than functions exercised in pursuance of the provision of services mentioned in paragraph (c)); or
(ii)his functions in the armed forces of the Crown;
(c)listed drugs and medicines which are ordered for those persons by a dental practitioner in pursuance of the provision of general dental services or equivalent services in the Scottish health service or the Northern Ireland health service;
(d)such drugs and medicines and such listed appliances as may be determined by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this paragraph which are ordered for those persons by a prescribed description of person in accordance with such conditions, if any, as may be prescribed, in pursuance of functions in the health service, the Scottish health service, the Northern Ireland health service or the armed forces of the Crown; and
(e)such other services as may be prescribed.
(2)The services provided under this section are, together with additional pharmaceutical services provided in accordance with a direction under section 41A, referred to in this Act as “pharmaceutical services”.
(3)The descriptions of persons which may be prescribed for the purposes of subsection (1)(d) are the following, or any sub-category of such a description—
[(a)persons who are registered in the register maintained under article 5 of the Health Professions Order 2001;]
(b)persons who are registered pharmacists;
(c)persons whose names are entered in a roll or record established by the General Dental Council by virtue of section 45 of the Dentists Act 1984 (c. 24) (dental auxiliaries);
(d)persons who are ophthalmic opticians;
(e)persons who are registered osteopaths within the meaning of the Osteopaths Act 1993 (c. 21);
(f)persons who are registered chiropractors within the meaning of the Chiropractors Act 1994 (c. 17);
(g)persons who are registered in the register of qualified nurses, midwives and health visitors maintained under section 7 of the Nurses, Midwives and Health Visitors Act 1997 (c. 24);
(h)persons who are registered in any register established, continued or maintained under an Order in Council under section 60(1) of the Health Act 1999 (c. 8);
(i)any other description of persons which appears to the Secretary of State to be a description of persons whose profession is regulated by or under a provision of, or made under, an Act of the Scottish Parliament or Northern Ireland legislation and which the Secretary of State considers it appropriate to specify.
(4)A determination under subsection (1)(d) may—
(a)make different provision for different cases;
(b)provide for the circumstances or cases in which a drug, medicine or appliance may be ordered;
(c)provide that persons falling within a description specified in the determination may exercise discretion in accordance with any provision made by the determination in ordering drugs, medicines and listed appliances.
(5)The arrangements which may be made by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority under subsection (1) include arrangements for the provision of a service by means such that the person receiving it does so otherwise than at the premises from which it is provided.
(6)Where a person with whom a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority makes arrangements under subsection (1) wishes to provide services to persons outside the area of the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, he may, subject to any provision made by regulations in respect of arrangements under this section, provide such services under the arrangements.
(7)In this section—
“armed forces of the Crown” does not include forces of a Commonwealth country or forces raised in a colony;
“listed” means included in a list for the time being approved by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this section; and
“the Scottish health service” and “the Northern Ireland health service” mean respectively the health service established in pursuance of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1947 (c. 27) or any service provided in pursuance of Article 4(1) of the Health and Personal Social Services (Northern Ireland) Order 1972 (S.I. 1972/1265 (N.I. 14)).]
[41A Arrangements for providing additional pharmaceutical services.E+W+S
(1)The Secretary of State may—
(a)give directions to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority requiring them to arrange for the provision to persons [within or outside their area] of additional pharmaceutical services; or
(b)by giving directions to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority authorise them to arrange for such provision if they wish to do so.
[(1A)Directions under this section may require or authorise a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to arrange for the provision of a service by means such that the person receiving it does so otherwise than at the premises from which it is provided (whether those premises are inside or outside the area of the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority).]
(2)Directions under this section may make different provision in relation to different services specified in the directions.
(3)The Secretary of State must publish any directions under this section in the Drug Tariff or in such other manner as he thinks appropriate.
(4)In this section—
“additional pharmaceutical services”, in relation to directions, means such services (of a kind that do not fall within section 41) as may be specified in the directions; and
“Drug Tariff” means the Drug Tariff published under regulation 18 of the National Health Service (Pharmaceutical Services) Regulations 1992 or under any corresponding provision replacing, or otherwise derived from, that regulation.]
Textual Amendments
Marginal Citations
[41B Terms and conditions etc.E+W+S
(1)Directions under section 41A may require the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to whom they apply, when making arrangements—
(a)to include, in the terms on which the arrangements are made, such terms as may be specified in the directions;
(b)to impose, on any person providing a service in accordance with the arrangements, such conditions as may be so specified.
(2)The arrangements must secure that any service to which they apply is provided only by a person whose name is included in a pharmaceutical list.
(3)Different arrangements may be made with respect to—
(a)the provision of the same service by the same person but in different circumstances; or
(b)the provision of the same service by different persons.
(4)A [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must provide details of proposed arrangements (including the remuneration to be offered for the provision of services) to any person who asks for them.
(5)After making any arrangements, a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must publish, in such manner as the Secretary of State may direct, such details of the arrangements as he may direct.
(6)In this section, “pharmaceutical list” means, subject to any provision of the directions in question, a list—
(a)published by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority concerned, or by any other [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, in accordance with regulations made under section 42(2)(a) of this Act; or
(b)published by any body in accordance with regulations made under section 27(2)(a) of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 or Article 63(2A)(a) of the Health and Personal Social Services (Northern Ireland) Order 1972.]
Textual Amendments
Marginal Citations
[42Regulations as to pharmaceutical services.E+W+S
(1)Regulations shall provide for securing that arrangements made by a [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] under section 41 above will—
[(a)enable persons for whom drugs, medicines or appliances mentioned in that section are ordered as there mentioned to receive them from persons with whom such arrangements have been made; and
(b)ensure the provision of services prescribed under subsection (1)(e) of that section by persons with whom such arrangements have been made.]
(2)The regulations shall include provision—
(a)for the preparation and publication by [a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] of one or more lists of persons, other than medical practitioners and dental practitioners, who undertake to provide pharmaceutical services from premises in the [area of the Primary Care Trust or Health Authority];
(b)that an application to [a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] for inclusion in such a list shall be made in the prescribed manner and shall state—
(i)the services which the applicant will undertake to provide and, if they consist of or include the supply of appliances, which appliances he will undertake to supply; and
(ii)the premises from which he will undertake to provide those services;
(c)that, except in prescribed cases [(which may, in particular, include cases of applications for the provision only of services falling within subsection (3A) below)]—
(i)an application for inclusion in such a list by a person not already included; and
(ii)an application by a person already included in such a list for inclusion also in respect of services or premises other than those already listed in relation to him,
shall be granted only if the [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority are] satisfied, in accordance with the regulations, that it is necessary or desirable to grant it in order to secure in the neighbourhood in which the premises are located the adequate provision by persons included in the list of the services, or some of the services, specified in the application; and
(d)for the removal of an entry in respect of premises from a list if it has been determined in the prescribed manner that the person to whom the entry relates—
(i)has never provided from those premises; or
(ii)has ceased to provide from them, the services, or any of the services, which he is listed as undertaken to provide from them.
(3)The regulations may include provision—
(a)that an application to a [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] may be granted in respect of some only of the services specified in it;
(b)that an application to a [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] relating to services of a prescribed description shall be granted only if it appears to the [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] that the applicant has satisfied such conditions with regard to the provision of those services as may be prescribed;
[(ba)that an application to a [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] by a person who qualified to have his name registered under the Pharmacy Act 1954 by virtue of section 4A of that Act (qualification by European diploma) shall not be granted unless the applicant satisfies the [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] that he has the knowledge of English which, in the interests of himself and persons making use of the services to which the application relates, is necessary for the provision of pharmaceutical services in the [[area of the Primary Care Trust or Health Authority] ;]]
(c)that the inclusion of a person in a list in pursuance of such an application may be for a fixed period;
(d)that, where the premises from which an application states that the applicant will undertake to provide services are in an area of a prescribed description, the applicant shall not be included in the list unless his inclusion is approved by [reference to prescribed criteria by the [[Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority in whose area] those premises are situated; [and]]
(e)that [that [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may give their] approval subject to conditions.
[(f)as to other grounds on which a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, or must, refuse to grant an application (including grounds corresponding to the conditions referred to in section 49F(2), (3) and (4) as read with section 49H below);
(g)as to information which must be supplied to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by a person included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list (or by arrangement with him);
(h)for the supply to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by an individual—
(i)who is included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list, or
(ii)who is a member of the body of persons controlling a body corporate included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list,
of a criminal conviction certificate under section 112 of the Police Act 1997 (c. 50), a criminal record certificate under section 113 of that Act or an enhanced criminal record certificate under section 115 of that Act;
(i)for grounds on which a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may defer a decision whether or not to grant an application;
(j)for the disclosure by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, to prescribed persons or persons of prescribed descriptions, of information of a prescribed description about applicants for inclusion in such a list, and refusals by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to grant such applications;
(k)as to criteria to be applied in making decisions under the regulations (other than decisions required by virtue of paragraph (d))]
[(l)as to the making of declarations about—
(i)financial interests;
(ii)gifts above a prescribed value; and
(iii)other benefits received.]
[(3A)A service falls within this subsection if the means of providing it is such that the person receiving it does so otherwise than at the premises from which it is provided.
(3B)The regulations may, in respect of services falling within subsection (3A) above, include provision—
(a)requiring persons to be approved for the purposes of providing such services, by the Secretary of State or such other person as may be specified in the regulations, in accordance with criteria to be specified in or determined under the regulations (whether by the Secretary of State or by another person so specified);
(b)requiring the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to make the grant of an application subject to prescribed conditions.]
[(3C)Before making regulations by virtue of subsection (3)(l), the Secretary of State must consult such organisations as he thinks fit appearing to him to represent persons providing pharmaceutical services.]
(4)The regulations shall include provision conferring on such persons as may be prescribed rights of appeal from decisions made by virtue of this section.
[(4A)If regulations made by virtue of subsection (3)(f) provide that a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may refuse to grant an application, they must also provide for an appeal (by way of redetermination) to the FHSAA against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority].]
(5)The regulations shall be so framed as to preclude—
(a)a person included in a list published under subsection (2)(a) above ;and (b) an employee of such a person; from taking part in the decision whether an application such as is mentioned in subsection (2)(c) above should be granted or an appeal against such a decision brought by virtue of subsection (4) above should be allowed.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
43 Persons authorised to provide pharmaceutical services.E+W+S
(1)No arrangements shall be made by [a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] (except as may be provided by [or under] regulations) with a medical practitioner or dental practitioner under which he is required or agrees to provide pharmaceutical services to any person to whom he is rendering general medical services or general dental services.
(2)No arrangements for the dispensing of medicines shall be made (except as may be provided by [or under] regulations) with persons other than persons who are registered pharmacists, or are persons lawfully conducting a retail pharmacy business in accordance with section 69 of the Medicines Act 1968 and who undertake that all medicines supplied by them under the arrangements made under this Part of this Act shall be dispensed either by or under the direct supervision of a registered pharmacist.
[[(2A)Regulations shall provide for the preparation and publication by each Primary Care Trust and by each Health Authority of one or more lists of medical practitioners whoundertake to provide drugs, medicines or listed appliances under arrangements with the Primary Care Trust or with the Health Authority.]
(2B)In subsection (2A) “listed” has the same meaning as in section 41.
[(2BA)The regulations may, in particular, include provision—
(a)as to grounds on which a Health Authority may, or must, refuse to grant an application for inclusion in a list of medical practitioners referred to in subsection (2A) (including grounds corresponding to the conditions referred to in section 49F(2), (3) and (4) as read with section 49H(2) below);
(b)as to information which must be supplied to a Health Authority by a medical practitioner included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list (or by arrangement with him);
(c)for the supply to a Health Authority by a medical practitioner who is included, or seeking inclusion, in such a list of a criminal conviction certificate under section 112 of the Police Act 1997 (c. 50), a criminal record certificate under section 113 of that Act or an enhanced criminal record certificate under section 115 of that Act;
(d)for grounds on which a Health Authority may defer a decision whether or not to grant an application for inclusion in such a list;
(e)for the disclosure by a Health Authority, to prescribed persons or persons of prescribed descriptions, of information of a prescribed description about applicants for inclusion in such a list, and refusals by the Health Authority to grant such applications;
(f)as to criteria to be applied in making decisions under the regulations
(2BB)If regulations made by virtue of subsection (2BA)(a) provide that a Health Authority may refuse to grant an application for inclusion in such a list, they must also provide for an appeal (by way of redetermination) to the FHSAA against the Health Authority’s decision.]
(2C)The regulations shall include provision for the removal of an entry from a list in prescribed circumstances.]
[(3)No arrangements for the provision of pharmaceutical services falling within [section 41(1)(e)][, or additional pharmaceutical services provided in accordance with a direction under section 41A,] above shall be made with persons other than those who are registered pharmacists or are of a prescribed description.]
Textual Amendments
Marginal Citations
[43ZA Conditional inclusion in medical, dental, ophthalmic and pharmaceutical listsE+W+S
(1)The Secretary of State may by regulations provide—
(a)that if a person is to be included in a list referred to in subsection (3), he is to be subject, while he remains included in the list, to conditions determined by the [Primary Care Trust or Health Authority in whose list he is included] ,
(b)for the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to vary that person’s terms of service for the purpose of or in connection with the imposition of any such conditions,
(c)for the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to vary the conditions or impose different ones,
(d)for the consequences of failing to comply with a condition (including removal from the list), and
(e)for the review by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority of any decision made by virtue of the regulations.
(2)The imposition of conditions must be with a view to—
(a)preventing any prejudice to the efficiency of the services in question, or
(b)preventing any acts or omissions within section 49F(3)(a) below.
(3)The lists in question are—
(a)a list of persons undertaking to provide general medical services,
(b)a list of persons undertaking to provide general dental services,
(c)a list of persons undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services,
(d)a list of persons undertaking to provide pharmaceutical services.
(4)If regulations provide for a practitioner’s removal from the list for breach of condition—
(a)the regulations may provide that he may not withdraw from the list while the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority are investigating whether there are grounds for exercising their power to remove him, or after the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority have decided to remove him but before they have given effect to that decision; and
(b)the regulations must include provision—
(i)requiring the practitioner to be given notice of any allegation against him,
(ii)giving him the opportunity of putting his case at a hearing before the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority make any decision as to his removal from the list, and
(iii)requiring him to be given notice of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] and the reasons for it and of his right of appeal under subsection (5).
(5)If regulations provide as mentioned in subsection (1), they must also provide for an appeal by the person in question to the FHSAA against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority]—
(a)to impose conditions, or any particular condition,
(b)to vary a condition,
(c)to vary his terms of service,
(d)on any review of an earlier such decision of theirs,
(e)to remove him from the list for breach of condition,
and the appeal shall be by way of redetermination of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] .
(6)The regulations may provide for any such decision not to have effect until the determination by the FHSAA of any appeal against it, and must so provide in relation to a decision referred to in subsection (5)(e).
(7)Regulations under this section may provide for the disclosure by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, to prescribed persons or persons of prescribed descriptions, of information of a prescribed description about persons whose inclusion in the lists referred to in subsection (3) is subject to conditions imposed under this section, and about the removal of such persons from such lists for breach of condition.]
[ Indemnity coverE+W+S
[43C Indemnity cover.E+W+S
(1)Regulations may make provision for the purpose of securing that, in prescribed circumstances, prescribed Part II practitioners hold approved indemnity cover.
(2)The regulations may, in particular, make provision as to the consequences of a failure to hold approved indemnity cover, including provision—
(a)for securing that a person is not to be added to any list unless he holds approved indemnity cover;
(b)for the removal from a list prepared by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority of a Part II practitioner who does not within a prescribed period after the making of a request by the Health Authority in the prescribed manner satisfy the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority that he holds approved indemnity cover.
(3)For the purposes of this section—
“approved body” means a person or persons approved in relation to indemnity cover of any description, after such consultation as may be prescribed, by the Secretary of State or by such other person as may be prescribed;
“approved indemnity cover” means indemnity cover made—
(a)
on prescribed terms; and
(b)
with an approved body;
“indemnity cover”, in relation to a Part II practitioner (or person who proposes to provide Part II services), means a contract of insurance or other arrangement made for the purpose of indemnifying him and any person prescribed in relation to him to any prescribed extent against any liability which—
(a)
arises out of the provision of Part II services in accordance with arrangements made by him with a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority under this Part of this Act; and
(b)
is incurred by him or any such person in respect of the death or personal injury of a person;
[“list” means a list of any kind mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (e) of section 49F below;]
“Part II practitioner” means a person whose name is on a list;
“Part II services” means general medical services, general dental services, general ophthalmic services or pharmaceutical services;
“personal injury” means any disease or impairment of a person’s physical or mental condition and includes the prolongation of any disease or such impairment;
and a person holds approved indemnity cover if he has entered into a contract or arrangement which constitutes approved indemnity cover.
(4)The regulations may provide that a person of any description who has entered into a contract or arrangement which is—
(a)in a form identified in accordance with the regulations in relation to persons of that description; and
(b)made with a person or persons so identified,
is to be treated as holding approved indemnity cover for the purposes of the regulations.]
[43D Supplementary listsE+W+S
(1)The Secretary of State may make regulations providing for the preparation and publication by [each Primary Care Trust and] each Health Authority of one or more lists of persons approved by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority for the purpose of assisting in the provision of general medical services, general dental services, general ophthalmic services and pharmaceutical services.
(2)Such a list is referred to in this section as a “supplementary list”.
(3)The regulations may, in particular, include provision as to—
(a)the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to which an application for inclusion in a supplementary list is to be made,
(b)the procedure for applying for inclusion, including any information to be supplied to the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority (whether by the applicant or by arrangement with him),
(c)grounds on which the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, or must, refuse a person’s application for inclusion in a supplementary list (including his unsuitability for inclusion in such a list), or on which they may defer their decision on the application,
(d)requirements with which a person included in a supplementary list must comply (including the declaration of financial interests and of gifts and other benefits),
(e)grounds on which a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, or must, suspend or remove a person from a supplementary list, the procedure for doing so, and the consequences of doing so,
(f)payments to or in respect of persons who are suspended from a supplementary list (including provision for the amount of the payments, or the method of calculating the amount, to be determined by the Secretary of State or by another person appointed for the purpose by the Secretary of State),
(g)the supply to the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by an applicant for inclusion in a supplementary list, or by a person included in one, of a criminal conviction certificate under section 112 of the Police Act 1997 (c. 50), a criminal record certificate under section 113 of that Act or an enhanced criminal record certificate under section 115 of that Act,
(h)circumstances in which a person included in a supplementary list may not withdraw from it,
(i)criteria to be applied in making decisions under the regulations,
(j)appeals against decisions of [Primary Care Trusts and] Health Authorities under the regulations,
(k)the disclosure by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, to prescribed persons or persons of prescribed descriptions, of information of a prescribed description about applicants for inclusion in a supplementary list, refusals of such applications, and suspensions and removals from that list.
(4)The regulations may, in particular, also provide for—
(a)a person’s inclusion in a supplementary list to be subject to conditions determined by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority,
(b)the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to vary the conditions or impose different ones,
(c)the consequences of failing to comply with a condition (including removal from the list), and
(d)the review by the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority of their decisions made by virtue of regulations under this subsection.
(5)The imposition of such conditions must be with a view to—
(a)preventing any prejudice to the efficiency of the services to which the supplementary list relates; or
(b)preventing any acts or omissions of the type described in section 49F(3)(a) below.
(6)Regulations made by virtue of subsection (3)(e) may (but need not) make provision corresponding to anything in sections 49F to 49N below.
(7)If the regulations provide under subsection (3)(e) or (4) that a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may suspend or remove a person from a supplementary list, they must include provision—
(a)requiring him to be given notice of any allegation against him;
(b)giving him the opportunity of putting his case at a hearing before the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority make any decision as to his suspension or removal; and
(c)requiring him to be given notice of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] and the reasons for it and of any right of appeal under subsection (8) or (9).
(8)If the regulations provide under subsection (3)(c) or (e) that a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may refuse a person’s application for inclusion in a supplementary list, or remove a person from one, the regulations must provide for an appeal (by way of redetermination) to the FHSAA against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] .
(9)If the regulations make provision under subsection (4), they must provide for an appeal (by way of redetermination) by the person in question to the FHSAA against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority]—
(a)to impose conditions, or any particular condition,
(b)to vary a condition,
(c)to remove him from the supplementary list for breach of condition,
(d)on any review of an earlier such decision of theirs.
(10)Regulations may require a person (“A”) included in—
(a)a medical list,
(b)a list referred to in section 36(1)(a),
(c)a list referred to in section 39(1)(a),
(d)a list referred to in section 42(2)(a), or
(e)a list referred to in section 43(2A),
not to employ or engage a person (“B”) to assist him in the provision of the relevant service unless B is included in a list referred to in paragraphs (a) to (e), a supplementary list, a services list referred to in section 28DA above or section 8ZA of the National Health Service (Primary Care) Act 1997 (c. 46) or a list corresponding to a services list prepared by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority by virtue of regulations made under section 41 of the Health and Social Care Act 2001 (or, in any of those cases, such a list of a prescribed description).
(11)If regulations do so require, they—
(a)need not require both A and B to be included in lists prepared [by the same Primary Care Trust or] by the same Health Authority, but
(b)may, in particular, require that both A and B be included in lists prepared by [Primary Care Trusts] , or in lists prepared by [Health Authorities] .]]
Local representative committeesE+W+S
44 Recognition of local representative committees.E
[(ZA1)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for the area of that and one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied isrepresentative of—
(a)the medical practitioners providing general medical services or general ophthalmic services in the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(b)those medical practitioners and the deputy medical practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(c)the medical practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C medical practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Medical Committee for the Primary Care Trust’s area.]
[(A1)A Health Authority may recognise a committee formed for their area which they are satisfied is representative of—
(a)the medical practitioners providing general medical services or general ophthalmic services in that area;
(b)those medical practitioners and the deputy medical practitioners for that area; or
(c)the medical practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C medical practitioners for that area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Medical Committee for the area.
[(A2)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for the area of that and one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied isrepresentative of—
(a)the dental practitioners providing general dental services in the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(b)those dental practitioners and the deputy dental practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(c)the dental practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C dental practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Dental Committee for the Primary Care Trust’s area.]
(B1)A Health Authority may recognise a committee formed for their area which they are satisfied is representative of—
(a)the dental practitioners providing general dental services in that area;
(b)those dental practitioners and the deputy dental practitioners for that area; or
(c)the dental practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C dental practitioners for that area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Dental Committee for the area.]
[(B2)Where a Primary Care Trust is satisfied that a committee formed for its area, or for its area together with the area of one or more other Primary Care Trusts, isrepresentative—
(a)of the ophthalmic opticians providing general ophthalmic services in the Primary Care Trust’s area; or
[(b)of—
(i)the persons providing pharmaceutical services from premises in the Primary Care Trust’s area, or
(ii)the persons mentioned in sub-paragraph (i) above and the persons providing local pharmaceutical services in the Primary Care Trust’s area,]
the Primary Care Trust may recognise that committee; and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Optical Committee or the Local Pharmaceutical Committee, asthe case may be, for the area of the Primary Care Trust.]
(1)Where [a [Health Authority are satisfied] that a committee formed for [their area] is representative]—
[(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .]
(c)of the ophthalmic opticians . . . providing general ophthalmic services in that [area], or
(d)of the persons providing pharmaceutical services [from premises] in that [area],
[the Family Health Services Authority] may recognise that committee; and any committee so recognised shall be called. . . the Local Optical Committee or the Local Pharmaceutical Committee, as the case may be, for the [area] concerned.
(2)Any such committee may . . . delegate any of their functions, with or without restrictions or conditions, to sub-committees composed of members of that committee.
[(3)For the purposes of this section and section 45 below, a person who meets the condition in subsection (4) below—
(a)is a deputy medical practitioner for the area of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority if he is a medical practitioner who assists a medical practitioner providing general medical services in that area in the provision of those services but is not himself on a [medical list]];
[(aa)is a section 28C medical practitioner for the area of a Primary Care Trust if he is a medical practitioner who performs personal medical services in the area of the PrimaryCare Trust in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above;]
(b)is a section 28C medical practitioner for the area of a Health Authority if he is a medical practitioner who provides or performs personal medical services in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above by the Health Authority (whether with himself or another);
(c)is a deputy dental practitioner for the area of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority if he is a dental practitioner who assists a dental practitioner providing general dental services in that area in the provision of those services but is not himself on a [list of dental practitioners and dental corporations undertaking to provide general dental services];
[(ca)is a section 28C dental practitioner for the area of a Primary Care Trust if he is a dental practitioner who performs personal dental services in the area of the PrimaryCare Trust in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above;]
(d)is a section 28C dental practitioner for the area of a Health Authority if he is a dental practitioner who provides or performs personal dental services in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above by the Health Authority (whether with himself or another)
[(e)is a person providing local pharmaceutical services in the area of a Primary Care Trust if he provides such services in accordance with LPS arrangements made by the Primary Care Trust (whether with himself or another.)].
(4)The condition referred to in subsection (3) above is that the person concerned has notified the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority that he wishes to be represented under this section by the appropriate committee for their area (and has not notified them that he wishes to cease to be so represented).
(5)For the purposes of subsection (3) above—
(a)a person is to be treated as assisting a medical practitioner or dental practitioner in the provision of services if he is employed by that practitioner for that purpose or if he acts as his deputy in providing those services; [ . . .
(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .]
Extent Information
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
44 Recognition of local representative committees.W+S
[(ZA1)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for the area of that and one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied isrepresentative of—
(a)the medical practitioners providing general medical services or general ophthalmic services in the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(b)those medical practitioners and the deputy medical practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(c)the medical practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C medical practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Medical Committee for the Primary Care Trust’s area.]
[(A1)A Health Authority may recognise a committee formed for their area which they are satisfied is representative of—
(a)the medical practitioners providing general medical services or general ophthalmic services in that area;
(b)those medical practitioners and the deputy medical practitioners for that area; or
(c)the medical practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C medical practitioners for that area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Medical Committee for the area.
[(A2)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for the area of that and one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied isrepresentative of—
(a)the dental practitioners providing general dental services in the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(b)those dental practitioners and the deputy dental practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area;
(c)the dental practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C dental practitioners for the Primary Care Trust’s area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Dental Committee for the Primary Care Trust’s area.]
(B1)A Health Authority may recognise a committee formed for their area which they are satisfied is representative of—
(a)the dental practitioners providing general dental services in that area;
(b)those dental practitioners and the deputy dental practitioners for that area; or
(c)the dental practitioners mentioned in—
(i)paragraph (a) above; or
(ii)paragraph (b) above,
and the section 28C dental practitioners for that area,
and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Dental Committee for the area.]
[(B2)Where a Primary Care Trust is satisfied that a committee formed for its area, or for its area together with the area of one or more other Primary Care Trusts, isrepresentative—
(a)of the ophthalmic opticians providing general ophthalmic services in the Primary Care Trust’s area; or
(b)of the persons providing pharmaceutical services from premises in the Primary Care Trust’s area,
the Primary Care Trust may recognise that committee; and any committee so recognised shall be called the Local Optical Committee or the Local Pharmaceutical Committee, asthe case may be, for the area of the Primary Care Trust.]
(1)Where [a [Health Authority are satisfied] that a committee formed for [their area] is representative]—
[(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .]
(c)of the ophthalmic opticians . . . providing general ophthalmic services in that [area], or
(d)of the persons providing pharmaceutical services [from premises]in that [area],
[the Family Health Services Authority] may recognise that committee; and any committee so recognised shall be called. . . the Local Optical Committee or the Local Pharmaceutical Committee, as the case may be, for the [area] concerned.
(2)Any such committee may . . . delegate any of their functions, with or without restrictions or conditions, to sub-committees composed of members of that committee.
[(3)For the purposes of this section and section 45 below, a person who meets the condition in subsection (4) below—
(a)is a deputy medical practitioner for the area of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority if he is a medical practitioner who assists a medical practitioner providing general medical services in that area in the provision of those services but is not himself on a [medical list]];
[(aa)is a section 28C medical practitioner for the area of a Primary Care Trust if he is a medical practitioner who performs personal medical services in the area of the PrimaryCare Trust in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above;]
(b)is a section 28C medical practitioner for the area of a Health Authority if he is a medical practitioner who provides or performs personal medical services in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above by the Health Authority (whether with himself or another);
(c)is a deputy dental practitioner for the area of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority if he is a dental practitioner who assists a dental practitioner providing general dental services in that area in the provision of those services but is not himself on a [list of dental practitioners and dental corporations undertaking to provide general dental services];
[(ca)is a section 28C dental practitioner for the area of a Primary Care Trust if he is a dental practitioner who performs personal dental services in the area of the PrimaryCare Trust in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above;]
(d)is a section 28C dental practitioner for the area of a Health Authority if he is a dental practitioner who provides or performs personal dental services in accordance with arrangements made under section 28C above by the Health Authority (whether with himself or another).
(4)The condition referred to in subsection (3) above is that the person concerned has notified the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority that he wishes to be represented under this section by the appropriate committee for their area (and has not notified them that he wishes to cease to be so represented).
(5)For the purposes of subsection (3) above—
(a)a person is to be treated as assisting a medical practitioner or dental practitioner in the provision of services if he is employed by that practitioner for that purpose or if he acts as his deputy in providing those services; [. . .
(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .]
Extent Information
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
45 Functions of local representative committees.E
[(1)Regulations may require Health Authorities—
(a)in the exercise of their functions under this Part of this Act to consult committees recognised by them under section 44 above,
(b)in the exercise of any of their functions which relate to arrangements under section 28C above to consult committees recognised by them under section 44(A1)(c) or (B1)(c) above,
on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.
[(1ZA)Regulations may require—
(a)Primary Care Trusts, in the exercise of their functions under this Part of this Act, to consult committees recognised by them under section 44 above, [or
(aa)Primary Care Trusts, in the exercise of any of their functions which relate to LPS arrangements, to consult committees recognised by them under section 44(B2)(b)(ii) above, or]
(b)Strategic Health Authorities, in the exercise of any of their functions which relate to arrangements under section 28C above, to consult committees recognised under section 44(ZA1)(c) or (A2)(c) above by Primary Care Trusts for the area or areas where the personal medical or dental services are provided (or to be provided) under the arrangements,
on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.]
(1A)The [powers conferred by subsections (1) and (1ZA) above are] without prejudice to any other power to require a [Strategic Health Authority, Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to consult any committee recognised under section 44 above.
(1B)Committees recognised under section 44 above shall exercise such other functions as may be prescribed.
(1C)A committee recognised for an area under [subsection (ZA1)(b) or (c), (A1)(b) or (c), (A2)(b) or (c) [, (B1)(b) or (c) or (B2)(b)(ii)]] of section 44 above shall, in respect of each year, determine the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable —
[(za)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (ZA1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy medical practitioners forthe Primary Care Trust’s area;
(zb)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (ZA1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C medical practitioners for that area;]
(a)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy medical practitioners for the area;
(b)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C medical practitioners for the area;
[(ba)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A2)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy dental practitioners for thePrimary Care Trust’s area;
(bb)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A2)(c) of that section, to the section 28C dental practitioners for that area;]
(c)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (B1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy dental practitioners for the area;
(d)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (B1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C dental practitioners for the area.
[(e)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (B2)(b)(ii) of that section, to the persons providing local pharmaceutical services inthe Primary Care Trust’s area.]]
(2)The [Primary Care Trust or][ Health Authority] may, on the request of any committee recognised under section 44 for their [area], allot to that committee such sums for defraying the committee’s administrative expenses [(including travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members)] as may be determined by the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] . . .
(3)Any sums so allotted shall be out of the moneys available to the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] for the remuneration of persons of whom the committee so recognised is representative and who provide general medical services, general dental services, general ophthalmic services or pharmaceutical services, as the case may be, under this Part of this Act.
The amount of any such sums shall be deducted from the remuneration of those persons in such manner as may be determined by the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] . . .
[(4)Where a committee has made a determination under subsection (1C) above, it shall apportion the amount so determined among the deputy medical practitioners, section 28C medical practitioners, deputy dental practitioners [, section 28C dental practitioners or persons providing local pharmaceutical services,] as the case may be, for the area and each such practitioner shall pay in accordance with the committee’s directions the amount so apportioned to him.
(5)References in this section to administrative expenses of a committee include references to travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members; but the reference in subsection (2) above to a committee’s administrative expenses does not include so much of the committee’s administrative expenses as are determined under subsection (1C) above to be attributable to any practitioners mentioned in that subsection.]
Extent Information
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
45 Functions of local representative committees.W+S
[(1)Regulations may require Health Authorities—
(a)in the exercise of their functions under this Part of this Act to consult committees recognised by them under section 44 above,
(b)in the exercise of any of their functions which relate to arrangements under section 28C above to consult committees recognised by them under section 44(A1)(c) or (B1)(c) above,
on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.
[(1ZA)Regulations may require—
(a)Primary Care Trusts, in the exercise of their functions under this Part of this Act, to consult committees recognised by them under section 44 above,
(b)Strategic Health Authorities, in the exercise of any of their functions which relate to arrangements under section 28C above, to consult committees recognised under section 44(ZA1)(c) or (A2)(c) above by Primary Care Trusts for the area or areas where the personal medical or dental services are provided (or to be provided) under the arrangements,
on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.]
(1A)The [powers conferred by subsections (1) and (1ZA) above are] without prejudice to any other power to require a [Strategic Health Authority, Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to consult any committee recognised under section 44 above.
(1B)Committees recognised under section 44 above shall exercise such other functions as may be prescribed.
(1C)A committee recognised for an area under [subsection (ZA1)(b) or (c), (A1)(b) or (c), (A2)(b) or (c) or (B1)(b) or (c)] of section 44 above shall, in respect of each year, determine the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable —
[(za)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (ZA1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy medical practitioners forthe Primary Care Trust’s area;
(zb)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (ZA1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C medical practitioners for that area;]
(a)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy medical practitioners for the area;
(b)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C medical practitioners for the area;
[(ba)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A2)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy dental practitioners for thePrimary Care Trust’s area;
(bb)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (A2)(c) of that section, to the section 28C dental practitioners for that area;]
(c)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (B1)(b) or (c)(ii) of that section, to the deputy dental practitioners for the area;
(d)in the case of a committee recognised under subsection (B1)(c) of that section, to the section 28C dental practitioners for the area.]
(2)The [Primary Care Trust or][ Health Authority] may, on the request of any committee recognised under section 44 for their [area], allot to that committee such sums for defraying the committee’s administrative expenses [(including travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members)] as may be determined by the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] . . .
(3)Any sums so allotted shall be out of the moneys available to the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] for the remuneration of persons of whom the committee so recognised is representative and who provide general medical services, general dental services, general ophthalmic services or pharmaceutical services, as the case may be, under this Part of this Act.
The amount of any such sums shall be deducted from the remuneration of those persons in such manner as may be determined by the [Primary Care Trust or][Health Authority] . . .
[(4)Where a committee has made a determination under subsection (1C) above, it shall apportion the amount so determined among the deputy medical practitioners, section 28C medical practitioners, deputy dental practitioners or section 28C dental practitioners, as the case may be, for the area and each such practitioner shall pay in accordance with the committee’s directions the amount so apportioned to him.
(5)References in this section to administrative expenses of a committee include references to travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members; but the reference in subsection (2) above to a committee’s administrative expenses does not include so much of the committee’s administrative expenses as are determined under subsection (1C) above to be attributable to any practitioners mentioned in that subsection.]
Extent Information
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
[45ALocal Medical CommitteesE+W+S
(1)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for its area and that of one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied is representative of—
(a)the persons to whom subsection (3) applies; and
(b)the persons to whom subsection (4) applies.
(2)A Local Health Board may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for its area and that of one or more other Local Health Boards, which it is satisfied is representative of—
(a)the persons to whom subsection (3) applies; and
(b)the persons to whom subsection (4) applies.
(3)This subsection applies to—
(a)every medical practitioner who, under a general medical services contract entered into by him, is providing primary medical services in the area for which the committee is formed; and
(b)every medical practitioner who is providing general ophthalmic services in that area.
(4)This subsection applies to every other medical practitioner—
(a)who is performing primary medical services in the area for which the committee is formed—
(i)pursuant to section 16CC(2)(a) above;
(ii)in accordance with section 28C arrangements; or
(iii)under a general medical services contract; and
(b)who has notified the Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board that he wishes to be represented by the committee (and has not notified it that he wishes to cease to be so represented).
(5)A committee recognised under this section shall be called the Local Medical Committee for the area for which it is formed.
(6)Any such committee may delegate any of its functions, with or without restrictions or conditions, to sub-committees composed of members of that committee.
(7)Regulations may require a Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board, in the exercise of its functions relating to primary medical services, to consult any committee recognised by it under this section on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.
(8)Regulations may require a Strategic Health Authority, in the exercise of any of its functions which relate to section 28C arrangements for the provision of primary medical services, to consult, on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed, any committee—
(a)which is recognised by a Primary Care Trust under this section for the area where the services are (or are to be) provided under those arrangements; and
(b)which is representative of persons providing or performing those services under those arrangements.
(9)A committee recognised under this section shall have such other functions as may be prescribed.
(10)A committee recognised under this section shall in respect of each year determine—
(a)the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable to persons of whom its is representative under subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a); and
(b)the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable to persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b).
(11)A Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board may—
(a)on the request of a committee recognised by it, allot to that committee such sums for defraying the expenses referred to in subsection (10)(a) as it may determine; and
(b)deduct the amount of such sums from the remuneration of persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) under the general medical services contracts, or arrangements under section 38 above, entered into by them with the Trust or Board.
(12)A committee recognised under this section shall apportion the amount determined by it under subsection (10)(b) among the persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b); and each such person shall pay in accordance with the committee’s directions the amount so apportioned to him.
(13)References in this section to the administrative expenses of a committee include the travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members.
45BLocal Dental CommitteesE+W+S
(1)A Primary Care Trust may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for its area and that of one or more other Primary Care Trusts, which it is satisfied is representative of—
(a)the persons to whom subsection (3) applies; and
(b)the persons to whom subsection (4) applies.
(2)A Local Health Board may recognise a committee formed for its area, or for its area and that of one or more other Local Health Boards, which it is satisfied is representative of—
(a)the persons to whom subsection (3) applies; and
(b)the persons to whom subsection (4) applies.
(3)This subsection applies to every dental practitioner who, under a general dental services contract entered into by him, is providing primary dental services in the area for which the committee is formed.
(4)This subsection applies to every other dental practitioner—
(a)who is performing primary dental services in the area for which the committee is formed—
(i)under section 16CA(2) above;
(ii)in accordance with section 28C arrangements; or
(iii)under a general dental services contract; and
(b)who has notified the Primary Care Trust that he wishes to be represented by the committee (and has not notified it that he wishes to cease to be so represented).
(5)A committee recognised under this section shall be called the Local Dental Committee for the area for which it is formed.
(6)Any such committee may delegate any of its functions, with or without restrictions or conditions, to sub-committees composed of members of that committee.
(7)Regulations may require a Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board, in the exercise of its functions relating to primary dental services, to consult any committee recognised by it under this section on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed.
(8)Regulations may require a Strategic Health Authority, in the exercise of any of its functions which relate to section 28C arrangements for the provision of primary dental services, to consult, on such occasions and to such extent as may be prescribed, any committee—
(a)which is recognised by a Primary Care Trust under this section for the area where the services are (or are to be) provided under those arrangements; and
(b)which is representative of persons providing or performing those services under those arrangements.
(9)A committee recognised under this section shall have such other functions as may be prescribed.
(10)A committee recognised under this section shall in respect of each year determine—
(a)the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable to persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a); and
(b)the amount of its administrative expenses for that year attributable to persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b).
(11)A Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board may—
(a)on the request of a committee recognised by it, allot to that committee such sums for defraying the expenses referred to in subsection (10)(a) as it may determine; and
(b)deduct the amount of such sums from the remuneration of persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) under the general dental services contracts entered into by them with the Trust or Board.
(12)A committee recognised under this section shall apportion the amount determined by it under subsection (10)(b) among the persons of whom it is representative under subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b); and each such person shall pay in accordance with the committee’s directions the amount so apportioned to him.
(13)References in this section to the administrative expenses of a committee include the travelling and subsistence allowances payable to its members.]
[ Provisions as to disqualification of practitioners]E+W+S
46 Disqualification of practitioners.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
47 Removal of disqualification.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
48 Disqualification provisions in Scotland or Northern Ireland.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49 Regulations as to ss. 46 to 48.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49A Applications for interim suspension.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
49B Continuation of suspension pending appeal.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49C Sections 49A and 49B: procedure etc.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49D Suspension provisions in Scotland or Northern Ireland.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49E Payments in consequence of suspension.E+W+S
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
[49F Disqualification of practitionersE+W+S
(1)If it appears to a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority that any of the conditions set out in subsections (2) to (4) is established in relation to a person included in any of the following prepared by them—
(a)a list of medical practitioners undertaking to provide general medical services,
(b)a list of medical practitioners undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services,
(c)a list of dental practitioners and dental corporations undertaking to provide general dental services,
(d)a list of ophthalmic opticians undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services, or
(e)a list of persons undertaking to provide pharmaceutical services,
(such a person being referred to in this group of sections as a “practitioner”), they may (or, in cases falling within subsection (6), must) decide to remove him from that list.
(2)The first condition is that the continued inclusion of the person concerned in the list would be prejudicial to the efficiency of the services which those included in the list undertake to provide (and such a case is referred to in this group of sections as an “efficiency case”).
(3)The second condition is that the person concerned—
(a)has (whether on his own or together with another) by an act or omission caused, or risked causing, detriment to any health scheme by securing or trying to secure for himself or another any financial or other benefit, and
(b)knew that he or (as the case may be) the other was not entitled to the benefit,
(and such a case is referred to in this group of sections as a “fraud case”).
(4)The third condition is that the person concerned is unsuitable to be included in the list (and such a case is referred to in this group of sections as an “unsuitability case”).
(5)“This group of sections” means this section and sections 49G to 49R below.
(6)In unsuitability cases, the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must remove the practitioner from the list in prescribed circumstances.
(7)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must state which condition (or conditions) they are relying on when removing a practitioner from a list.
(8)In subsection (3), “health scheme” means—
(a)any of the health services under section 1(1) above or any corresponding enactment extending to Scotland or Northern Ireland, and
(b)any prescribed scheme,
and regulations may prescribe any scheme for the purposes of this subsection which appears to the Secretary of State to be a health or medical scheme paid for out of public funds.
(9)Detriment to a health scheme includes detriment to any patient of, or person working in, that scheme or any person liable to pay charges for services provided under that scheme.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
[49GContingent removalE+W+S
(1)In an efficiency case or a fraud case, the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, instead of deciding to remove a practitioner from their list, decide to remove him contingently.
(2)If they so decide, they must impose such conditions as they may decide on his inclusion in the list with a view to—
(a)removing any prejudice to the efficiency of the services in question (in an efficiency case), or
(b)preventing further acts or omissions within section 49F(3)(a) above (in a fraud case).
(3)If the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority determine that the practitioner has failed to comply with a condition, they may decide to—
(a)vary the conditions, or impose different conditions, or
(b)remove him from their list.
(4)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may decide to vary the terms of service of the person concerned for the purpose of or in connection with the imposition of any conditions by virtue of this section.]
[49H Fraud and unsuitability cases: supplementaryE+W+S
(1)Where the practitioner is a body corporate, the body corporate is to be treated for the purposes of this group of sections as meeting the second or third condition referred to in section 49F(3) and (4) above—
(a)in the case of an ophthalmic optician not referred to in paragraph (b) or a dental corporation, if any director meets that condition (whether or not he first did so when he was a director), and
(b)in the case of a body corporate carrying on a retail pharmacy business or an ophthalmic optician which is a limited liability partnership, if any one of the body of persons controlling the body meets that condition (whether or not he first did so when he was such a person).
(2)A practitioner is to be treated for the purposes of this group of sections as meeting the condition referred to in section 49F(3) above if—
(a)another person, because of an act or omission of his occurring in the course of providing any services mentioned in section 49F(1) above on the practitioner’s behalf, meets that condition; and
(b)the practitioner failed to take all such steps as were reasonable to prevent acts or omissions within section 49F(3)(a) above occurring in the course of the provision of those services on his behalf.]
[49I SuspensionE+W+S
(1)If the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority are satisfied that it is necessary to do so for the protection of members of the public or is otherwise in the public interest, they may suspend a practitioner from their list—
(a)while they decide whether or not to exercise their powers under section 49F or 49G (other than in circumstances falling within paragraph (b)), or
(b)while they wait for a decision affecting the practitioner of a court or of a body which regulates—
(i)the practitioner’s profession,
(ii)the profession of a person providing any of the services mentioned in section 49F(1) on the practitioner’s behalf, or
(iii)if the practitioner is a body corporate, the profession of one of its directors or, as the case may be, one of the body of persons controlling it or (if it is a limited liability partnership) one of its members,
or one of that regulatory body’s committees.
(2)The references in subsection (1)(b) to a court or regulatory body are to a court or such a body anywhere in the world.
(3)In a case falling within subsection (1)(a), the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must specify how long the period of suspension is to be.
(4)In a case falling within subsection (1)(b), the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may specify that the practitioner shall remain suspended after the decision referred to there for an additional period which the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must specify.
(5)In either case—
(a)before that period expires they may extend, or further extend, the suspension for a further specified period, or
(b)if that period has expired, they may impose a further suspension, for a period which they must specify.
(6)The period of suspension (in a subsection (1)(a) case) or the additional period (in a subsection (1)(b) case), including in both cases the period of any further suspension imposed under subsection (5)(b), may not exceed six months in aggregate, except—
(a)in prescribed circumstances, when it may not extend beyond any prescribed event (which may be the expiry of a prescribed period),
(b)if, on the application of the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, the FHSAA orders accordingly before the expiry of the period of suspension, or
(c)if the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority have applied under paragraph (b) before the expiry of the period of suspension, but the FHSAA has not made an order by the time it expires, in which case it continues until the FHSAA has made an order.
(7)If the FHSAA does so order, it shall specify—
(a)the date on which the period of suspension is to end, or
(b)an event beyond which it is not to continue.
(8)The FHSAA may, on the application of the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority, make a further order (complying with subsection (7)) at any time while the period of suspension pursuant to the earlier order is still continuing.
(9)The Secretary of State may make regulations providing for payments to practitioners who are suspended.
(10)Those regulations may include provision for the amount of the payments, or the method of calculating the amount, to be determined by the Secretary of State or by another person appointed for the purpose by the Secretary of State.]
[49J Suspension pending appealE+W+S
(1)This section applies if the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority decide to remove a practitioner from a list under section 49F.
(2)In such a case they may also decide to suspend the practitioner from the list pending any appeal by him, if they are satisfied that it is necessary to do so for the protection of members of the public or is otherwise in the public interest.
(3)If they do suspend the practitioner under this section, the suspension has effect from the date when the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority gave him notice of the suspension.
(4)The suspension has effect until its revocation under subsection (5) or (6) or, if later, until the expiry of the period of 28 days referred to in section 49M(1) below, or, if the practitioner appeals under section 49M, until the FHSAA has disposed of the appeal.
(5)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may revoke a suspension imposed under this section.
(6)If the practitioner appeals under section 49M against the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] to remove him from the list, the FHSAA may also revoke a suspension imposed on him under this section.
(7)Subsections (9) and (10) of section 49I above apply for the purposes of this section as they apply for the purposes of that.]
[49K Effect of suspensionE+W+S
While a practitioner is suspended (whether under section 49I or under section 49J above) he is to be treated as not being included in the list from which he has been suspended even though his name appears in it.]
[49L Review of decisionsE+W+S
(1)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may, and (except in prescribed cases) if requested in writing to do so by the practitioner must, review a contingent removal or a suspension (other than a contingent removal or a suspension imposed by, or a suspension continuing pursuant to, an order of the FHSAA, or a suspension imposed under section 49J above).
(2)The practitioner may not request a review before the expiry of the period of—
(a)three months beginning with the date of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] to suspend or contingently remove him, or (as appropriate),
(b)six months beginning with the date of their decision on the previous review.
(3)On such a review, the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may—
(a)confirm the contingent removal or the suspension,
(b)in the case of a suspension, terminate it,
(c)in the case of a contingent removal, vary the conditions, impose different conditions, revoke the contingent removal, or remove the practitioner from the list.]
[49M AppealsE+W+S
(1)A practitioner may appeal to the FHSAA against a decision of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority mentioned in subsection (2) by giving notice in writing to the FHSAA within the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority gave him notice of the decision.
(2)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority decisions in question are—
(a)to remove the practitioner from a list (under section 49F or 49G(3) or under subsection (5)(b) of this section),
(b)to remove him contingently (under section 49G),
(c)to impose any particular condition under section 49G, or to vary any condition or to impose any different condition under that section,
(d)to vary his terms of service (under section 49G(4)),
(e)any decision on a review of a contingent removal under section 49L.
(3)The appeal shall be by way of redetermination of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] .
(4)On an appeal, the FHSAA may make any decision which the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority could have made.
(5)If the FHSAA decides to remove the practitioner contingently—
(a)the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority and the practitioner may each apply to the FHSAA for the conditions imposed on the practitioner to be varied, for different conditions to be imposed, or for the contingent removal to be revoked, and
(b)the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may remove him from their list if they determine that he has failed to comply with a condition.
(6)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority shall not remove a person from a list, or impose a contingent removal—
(a)until the expiry of the period of 28 days referred to in subsection (1), or
(b)if the practitioner appeals within that period, until the FHSAA has disposed of the appeal.
(7)Regulations may provide for payments by [Primary Care Trusts and] Health Authorities to practitioners who are removed from lists pursuant to decisions of the FHSAA under this section, but whose appeals against those decisions are successful[; and regulations under this subsection may include provision of the kind referred to in section 49I(10)].]
[49N National disqualificationE+W+S
(1)If the FHSAA removes the practitioner from a list, it may also decide to disqualify him from inclusion in—
(a)all lists referred to in section 49F(1)(a) to (e) prepared by [all Primary Care Trusts and] all Health Authorities,
(b)all supplementary lists prepared by [all Primary Care Trusts and] all Health Authorities, and
(c)all services lists prepared by [all Primary Care Trusts and] all Health Authorities under section 28DA above or under section 8ZA of the National Health Service (Primary Care) Act 1997 (c. 46), or any list corresponding to a services list prepared by [any Primary Care Trust or] any Health Authority by virtue of regulations made under section 41 of the Health and Social Care Act 2001,
or only from inclusion in one or more descriptions of such lists prepared by [all Primary Care Trusts and] all Health Authorities, the description being specified by the FHSAA in its decision.
(2)A decision by the FHSAA to do what is mentioned in subsection (1) is referred to in this section as the imposition of a national disqualification.
(3)The FHSAA may also impose a national disqualification on a practitioner if it dismisses an appeal by him against [the refusal by a Primary Care Trust or Health Authority] to include him in such a list (or, in the case of a medical list, to nominate or approve him for inclusion in it).
(4)The [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority may apply to the FHSAA for a national disqualification to be imposed on a person after they have—
(a)removed him from a list of theirs of any of the kinds referred to in subsection (1)(a) to (c), or
(b)refused to include him in such a list (or, in the case of a medical list, to nominate or approve him for inclusion in it).
(5)Any such application must be made before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of the removal or of their refusal.
(6)If the FHSAA imposes a national disqualification on a person—
(a)no [Primary Care Trust or]Health Authority may include him in a list of any of the kinds from which he has been disqualified from inclusion prepared by them, and
(b)if he is included in such a list, [each Primary Care Trust and] each Health Authority in whose list he is included must remove him from it.
(7)The FHSAA may at the request of the person upon whom it has been imposed review a national disqualification, and on a review may confirm it or revoke it.
(8)Subject to subsection (9), the person may not request such a review before the end of the period of—
(a)two years beginning with the date on which the national disqualification was imposed, or
(b)one year beginning with the date of the FHSAA’s decision on the last such review.
(9)The Secretary of State may provide in regulations for subsection (8) to have effect in prescribed circumstances as if the reference there to “two years” or “one year” were a reference to a different period specified in the regulations.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
[49O Notification of decisionsE+W+S
Regulations may require a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority to notify prescribed persons, or persons of prescribed descriptions, of any decision they make under this group of sections, and of any information relevant to the decision which they consider it appropriate to include in the notification.]
[49P Withdrawal from listsE+W+S
Regulations may provide for circumstances in which a practitioner—
(a)whom a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority are investigating in order to see whether there are grounds for exercising their powers under section 49F, 49G or 49I,
(b)whom a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority have decided to remove from a list under section 49F or 49G, or contingently remove under section 49G, but who has not yet been removed or contingently removed, or
(c)who has been suspended under section 49I,
may not withdraw from a list in which he is included.]
[49Q RegulationsE+W+S
(1)Any decision by a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority referred to in this group of sections shall be reached in accordance with regulations made by the Secretary of State about such decisions.
(2)The regulations shall include provision—
(a)requiring the practitioner to be given notice of any allegation against him,
(b)giving him the opportunity of putting his case at a hearing before a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authoriy make any decision affecting him under this group of sections,
(c)requiring him to be given notice of the [decision of the Primary Care Trust or of the Health Authority] and the reasons for it and of any right of appeal which he may have.
(3)The regulations may, in particular, make provision as to criteria which the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority must apply when making decisions in unsuitability cases.]
[49R Corresponding provision in Scotland and Northern IrelandE+W+S
(1)This section applies where it appears to the Secretary of State that there is provision in Scotland or Northern Ireland under which a person may be dealt with in any way which corresponds (whether or not exactly) with a way in which a person may be dealt with under this group of sections.
(2)A decision in Scotland or Northern Ireland to deal with such a person in such a way is referred to in this section as a “corresponding decision”.
(3)If this section applies, the Secretary of State may make regulations providing for the effect to be given in England and Wales to a corresponding decision.
(4)That effect need not be the same as the effect of the decision in the place where it was made.
(5)The regulations may not provide for a corresponding decision to be reviewed or revoked in England and Wales.]
[ The Family Health Services Appeal AuthorityE+W+S
[49S The Family Health Services Appeal AuthorityE+W+S
(1)There shall be a body to be known as the Family Health Services Appeal Authority (“FHSAA”).
(2)The FHSAA shall be constituted in accordance with Schedule 9A to this Act, which also makes other provision in relation to the FHSAA.
(3)The FHSAA shall have such functions as are conferred on it by this Act or by any other enactment.
(4)The Secretary of State may direct the FHSAA to exercise any of his functions relating to the determination of appeals to him which are specified in the directions.
(5)Directions under subsection (4) shall be given by regulations or by an instrument in writing.
(6)The Secretary of State may make available to the FHSAA any facilities (including the use of any premises) provided by him or by a Special Health Authority or NHS trust for any service under this Act, and the services of persons employed by the Secretary of State or by a Special Health Authority or NHS trust.
(7)Subsections (1) to (3) of section 27 above apply in relation to the services of persons employed by a Special Health Authority and made available under subsection (6) as they apply in relation to the services of officers of Special Health Authorities to be made available under section 26 above.
(8)For the purposes of subsection (6)—
(a)the Secretary of State may give directions to an NHS trust requiring it to make facilities or the services of persons available as mentioned there; but
(b)subsections (1) and (2) of section 27 above apply in relation to the services of such persons as they apply in relation to the services of officers to be made available by virtue of section 26 above by a [Strategic Health Authority,] Health Authority, Special Health Authority or Primary Care Trust.]]
Other provisions supplementary to Part IIE+W+S
50 Exercise of choice of practitioner in certain cases.E+W+S
Regulations may provide that, where a right to choose the person by whom [general opthalmic] services are to be provided under this Part of this Act is conferred by or under this Part, that right shall, in the case of such persons as may be specified in the regulations, be exercised on their behalf by other persons so specified.
51 University clinical teaching and research.E+W+S
[(1)] It is the Secretary of State’s duty to [exercise his functions under this Act and Part I of the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990 so as to secure that there are made available] such facilities as he considers are reasonably required by any university which has a medical or dental school, in connection with clinical teaching and with research connected with clinical medicine or, as the case may be, clinical dentistry.
[(2)Regulations may provide for any functions exercisable by a [Strategic Health Authority,] Health Authority [Special Health Authority [, Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board]] in relation to the provision of facilities such as are mentioned in subsection (1) above to be exercisable by the [Strategic Health Authority,] Health Authority [Special Health Authority [, Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board]] jointly with one or more other relevant health service bodies.
(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above the following are relevant health service bodies—
[(za)Strategic Health Authorities;]
(a)Health Authorities;
(b)Special Health Authorities;
[(bb)Primary Care Trusts]; [and]
[(bbb)Local Health Boards; and]
(c)NHS trusts.]
Textual Amendments
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
Marginal Citations
52 Use of accommodation.E+W+S
If the Secretary of State considers that any accommodation provided by him by virtue of this Act is suitable for use in connection with the provision of general medical services, general dental services, general ophthalmic services or pharmaceutical services he may make the accommodation available on such terms as he thinks fit to persons providing any of those services.
Modifications etc. (not altering text)
53 Immunisation.E+W+S
Where the Secretary of State arranges with medical practitioners for the vaccination or immunisation of persons against disease, he shall so far as reasonably practicable give every medical practitioner providing general medical services an opportunity to participate in the arrangements.
[54 Sale of medical practices.E+W+S
(1)It is unlawful to sell the goodwill of the medical practice of a person who has at any time—
(a)provided general medical services under arrangements made with any Council, Committee [, Primary Care Trust] or Authority under the National Health Service Act 1946, the National Health Service Reorganisation Act 1973 or this Act, or
(b)provided or performed personal medical services in accordance with section 28C arrangements,
unless that person no longer provides or performs such services and has never carried on the practice in a relevant area.
[or
(c)provided or performed primary medical services in accordance with section 28C arrangements, arrangements under section 16CC(2)(b) above or under a general medical services contract—
(i)in prescribed circumstances, or
(ii)if regulations so provide, in all circumstances,]
(2)In this section—
“goodwill” includes any part of goodwill and, in relation to a person practising in partnership, means his share of the goodwill of the partnership practice;
“medical practice” includes any part of a medical practice; and
“relevant area”, in relation to any Council, Committee [, Primary Care Trust] or Authority by arrangement with whom a person has at any time—
(a)
provided general medical services, or
(b)
provided or performed personal medical services in accordance with section 28C arrangements,
means the area, district or locality of that Council, Committee [, Primary Care Trust] or Authority (at that time).
(3)Schedule 10 supplements the provisions of this section.]
Textual Amendments
Marginal Citations
55. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E+W+S
56 Inadequate services.E+W+S
If the Secretary of State is satisfied, after such inquiry as he may think fit, as respects [the area, or part of the area, of a [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] that the persons whose names are included in any list prepared under this Part of this Act—
(a)of medical practitioners undertaking to provide general medical services,
(b)of dental practitioners undertaking to provide general dental services,
(c)of persons undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services, or
(d)of persons undertaking to provide pharmaceutical services,
are not such as to secure the adequate provision of the services [in question in that area or part, or that for any other reason any considerable number of persons in any such area or part are not] receiving satisfactory services under the arrangements in force under this Part, then—
[(i)he may authorise [the [Primary Care Trust or] Health Authority] to make such other arrangements as he may approve, or may himself make such other arrangements, and]
(ii)he may dispense with any of the requirements of regulations made under this Part so far as appears to him necessary to meet exceptional circumstances and enable such arrangements to be made.