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GUARDIANSHIP ACT 1987 - SECT 6E
Functions of enduring guardians
(1) Subject to subsection (2), an instrument appointing a person as an
enduring guardian authorises the appointee, while the appointment has effect,
to exercise the following functions: (a) deciding the place (such as a
specific nursing home, or the appointor’s own home) in which the appointor
is to live,
(b) deciding the health care that the appointor is to receive,
(c) deciding the other kinds of personal services that the appointor is to
receive,
(d) giving consent under Part 5 to the carrying out of
medical or dental treatment on the appointor,
(e) any other function relating
to the appointor’s person that is specified in the instrument.
(2) The
instrument of appointment may limit or exclude the authority it confers in
relation to any one or more of the functions specified in subsection (1).
(2A) For the purpose of exercising a function that an appointee is authorised
to exercise by an instrument appointing the appointee as an enduring guardian,
the appointee has the same right of access to information about the appointor
as the appointor has.
(2B) Nothing in the Privacy and Personal Information
Protection Act 1998 prevents a public sector agency (within the meaning of
that Act) from disclosing information about an appointor to an appointee if
the agency is satisfied that the disclosure of the information would assist
the appointee to exercise his or her functions as an enduring guardian.
(2C)
Nothing in subsection (2A) affects the operation of the
Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002 in relation to the disclosure
of health information about an appointor to an appointee. Note: Section 7 of
the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002 (when read with section 8
of that Act) provides that a guardian of an individual may do any act
authorised, permitted or required by that Act on behalf of an individual who
is incapable of doing that act. An individual is incapable of doing an act for
the purposes of section 7 if the individual is incapable, by reason of age,
injury, illness or physical or mental impairment, of understanding the general
nature and effect of the act or communicating the individual’s intentions
with respect to the act. If the individual is capable of doing the act, then
the guardian may not do the act on behalf of the individual unless expressly
authorised to do so.
(3) The functions authorised by an instrument appointing
an enduring guardian are, unless the Tribunal otherwise directs, to be
exercised in accordance with any lawful directions contained in the
instrument.
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