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HEALTH CARE COMPLAINTS ACT 1993 - SECT 72
Confidentiality
72 Confidentiality
(1) If any evidence proposed to be given before, or the
whole or a part of a document produced or proposed to be produced to, the
Joint Committee relates to a secret or confidential matter, the Committee may,
and at the request of the witness giving the evidence or the person producing
the document must: (a) take the evidence in private, or
(b) direct that the
document, or the part of the document, be treated as confidential.
(2) If any
evidence proposed to be given before, or the whole or a part of a document
produced or proposed to be produced in evidence to, the Joint Committee
relates to the proposed appointment of a person as the Commissioner of the
Commission, the Committee must (despite any other provision of this section):
(a) take the evidence in private, or
(b) direct that the document, or the
part of the document, be treated as confidential.
(3) Despite any other
provision of this section except subsection (9), the Joint Committee must not,
and a person (including a member of the Committee) must not, disclose any
evidence or the contents of a document or that part of a document to which
subsection (2) applies. Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months, or both.
(4) Despite any other provision of this section except
subsection (9), the Joint Committee (including a member of the Committee) must
not, and any person assisting the Committee or present during the
deliberations of the Committee must not, except in accordance with section 66
(3), disclose whether or not the Joint Committee or any member of the Joint
Committee has vetoed, or proposes to veto, the proposed appointment of a
person as Commissioner. Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months, or both.
(5) If a direction under subsection (1) applies to a
document or part of a document produced to the Joint Committee: (a) the
contents of the document or part are, for the purposes of this section, to be
regarded as evidence given by the person producing the document or part and
taken by the Committee in private, and
(b) the person producing the document
or part is, for the purposes of this section, to be regarded as a witness.
(6) If, at the request of a witness, evidence is taken by the Joint Committee
in private: (a) the Committee must not, without the consent in writing of the
witness, and
(b) a person (including a member of the Committee) must not,
without the consent in writing of the witness and the authority of the
Committee under subsection (8),
disclose or publish the whole or a part of
that evidence. Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months,
or both.
(7) If evidence is taken by the Joint Committee in private otherwise
than at the request of a witness, a person (including a member of the
Committee) must not, without the authority of the Committee under subsection
(8), disclose or publish the whole or a part of that evidence. Maximum
penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or both.
(8) The
Joint Committee may, in its discretion, disclose or publish or, by writing
under the hand of the Chair, authorise the disclosure or publication of
evidence taken in private by the Committee, but this subsection does not
operate so as to affect the necessity for the consent of a witness under
subsection (6).
(9) Nothing in this section prohibits: (a) the disclosure or
publication of evidence that has already been lawfully published, or
(b) the
disclosure or publication by a person of a matter of which the person has
become aware otherwise than by reason, directly or indirectly, of the giving
of evidence before the Joint Committee.
(10) This section has effect despite
section 4 of the Parliamentary Papers (Supplementary Provisions) Act 1975 .
(11) If evidence taken by the Joint Committee in private is disclosed or
published in accordance with this section, sections 5 and 6 of the
Parliamentary Papers (Supplementary Provisions) Act 1975 apply to and in
relation to the disclosure or publication as if it were a publication of that
evidence under the authority of section 4 of that Act. Note: The
Defamation Act 2005 makes provision for 2 defences in respect of the
publication of defamatory matter that is contained in evidence taken by, or
documents produced to, the Joint Committee in private, but only if the
evidence or documents have been disclosed or published in accordance with this
section.
Section 28 of the Defamation Act 2005 (when read with clause 8 of Schedule 2
to that Act) ensures that such documents attract the defence relating to
public documents in defamation proceedings.
Section 29 of the Defamation Act 2005 (when read with clause 17 of Schedule 3
to that Act) ensures that proceedings in which such evidence is taken or
documents produced attract the defences relating to fair reports of
proceedings of public concern in defamation proceedings.
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