PART IConstitution
1A Health Board shall be a body corporate and shall have a common seal.
2A Health Board shall consist of a chairman appointed by the Secretary of State and such number of other members so appointed as the Secretary of State thinks fit.
3Appointments under paragraph 2 shall be made after consultation with the following bodies—
(a)each local authority (within the meaning of the [1973 c. 65.] Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973) in the area of the Health Board concerned;
(b)any university appearing to the Secretary of State to have an interest in the provision of health services in that area ;
(c)such organisations as the Secretary of State may recognise as representative in that area of the medical, dental, nursing, pharmaceutical and ophthalmic professions and such other professions as the Secretary of State considers appropriate, or of those professions generally; and
(d)such other organisations as appear to the Secretary of State to be concerned.
4The Secretary of State may pay to the chairman of a Health Board such remuneration as he may, with the approval of the Minister for the Civil Service, from time to time determine.
5A Health Board may employ such officers and servants on such terms as to remuneration and conditions of service as the Board may, subject to regulations, determine.
6Regulations may make provision with respect to the method of appointment of officers or servants of a Health Board and as to the qualifications, remuneration and conditions of service of those persons.
7No officer or servant of a Health Board to whom regulations apply shall be employed otherwise than in accordance with the regulations.
8Regulations under paragraph 6 shall not contain a requirement that all consultants employed for the purpose of hospitals shall be employed whole-time.
9The application of the seal of a Health Board to any document shall be attested by at least one member of the Board and by the person for the time being acting as Secretary of the Board.
10Every document purporting to be an instrument issued by a Health Board, and to be sealed and attested as aforesaid or to be duly signed on behalf of the Board, shall be received in evidence and shall be deemed to be such an instrument without further proof, unless the contrary is shown.