✨ Health and Regulatory Notices
NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE, No. 175
13 NOVEMBER 2008
Health
Burial and Cremation Act 1964
Appointment of New Plymouth District Council to Have the Control and Management of Okato Cemetery, New Plymouth District
Pursuant to section 23(3) of the Burial and Cremation Act 1964, the Governor-General of New Zealand has appointed the New Plymouth District Council to have the control and management of Okato Cemetery as described in the Schedule hereto from the date of publication of this notice in the New Zealand Gazette.
Taranaki Land District—New Plymouth District
Schedule
| Area | Description |
|---|---|
| m² | |
| 6070 | Part Section 4 Okato Town Belt (Computer Freehold Register TN128/104). |
| 6070 | Part Section 4 Okato Town Belt (Computer Freehold Register TN128/105). |
Dated at Wellington this 4th day of November 2008.
HON DAMIEN O’CONNOR, Associate Minister of Health.
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Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001
Modification of Designation of Auditing Agency
Pursuant to section 35(1)(a) of the Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001 (“the Act”), I, Anthony Hill, Deputy Director-General, Sector Accountability & Funding, Ministry of Health (“the Ministry”), under delegation from the Director-General of Health, advise the modification of the designation of Verification New Zealand Limited (the Designated Auditing Agency (“DAA”)) to audit the provision or likely future provision of the following kinds of health care services:
- Hospital Care (as defined in section 4(1) of the Act)
- Rest Home Care (as defined in section 6(2) of the Act)
- Residential Disability Care (as defined in section 4(1) of the Act)
This designation is subject to the following conditions:
-
The DAA must comply with the requirements of the DAA Handbook issued by the Ministry and updated from time to time.
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The DAA must provide any information about the auditing of health care services pursuant to the Act if requested in writing by the Ministry.
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During the term of the DAA’s designation, the DAA will allow the Ministry to audit or to commission the undertaking of audits or reviews of the DAA. This could also include attending audits being undertaken by the DAA. The Ministry may or may not notify the DAA of any audit or review.
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The DAA must immediately notify the Ministry in writing of any significant change to the DAA, including but not restricted to:
- any change in ownership and/or control of the legal entity;
- any change in management personnel;
- any change to the Auditor Register (refer to condition 7); and
- any change in the status of any third party accreditation the DAA may hold including evidence of such accreditation and copies of any Third Party Accreditation Audit Reports or notifications in respect of their accreditation.
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The DAA must conduct as a minimum at least one annual:
- internal audit that focuses on the DAA’s auditing activities undertaken pursuant to the Act, together with a compliance audit against the requirements of the DAA as set out in the Act; and
- management review in respect of the DAA’s programmes operated pursuant to the Act.
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The DAA shall at all times operate an internal appeals system which is documented and conveyed in writing to all clients. Auditable records of the facts and outcomes of all client appeals shall be maintained by the DAA. The DAA must provide these records to the Ministry when requested in writing by the Ministry.
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The DAA must provide, in a timely manner when requested by the Ministry, in writing the details of the name, auditing qualifications and experience, and if relevant, the area of clinical or service competency of each auditor or technical expert approved by the DAA to undertake audits pursuant to the Act.
This designation expires on 25 January 2010.
This notice revokes and replaces in its entirety the notice that designated Verification New Zealand Limited, made pursuant to section 32 of the Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001, and published in the New Zealand Gazette, 1 February 2007, No. 10, page 211.
Dated at Wellington this 11th day of November 2008.
ANTHONY HILL, Deputy Director-General, Sector Accountability & Funding, Ministry of Health.
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Human Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2004
Guidelines Issued to Ethics Committee on Assisted Reproductive Technology
The Advisory Committee on Assisted Reproductive Technology (ACART) has updated the following guidelines issued to the Ethics Committee on Assisted Reproductive Technology (ECART) on 22 November 2007, and published in the New Zealand Gazette, 29 September 2007, No. 130, page 3375.
- Guidelines on Surrogacy Arrangements involving Providers of Fertility Services
- Guidelines on Donation of Eggs or Sperm between Certain Family Members.
The guidelines have been updated to include the following guidance on terms used:
In these guidelines, unless the context indicates otherwise, words should be interpreted in accordance with definitions given in the Human Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2004 and the Human Assisted Reproductive Technology Order 2005.
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏥 Appointment of New Plymouth District Council for Okato Cemetery
🏥 Health & Social Welfare4 November 2008
Cemetery, Control, Management, Okato, New Plymouth District Council, Burial and Cremation Act 1964
- HON DAMIEN O’CONNOR, Associate Minister of Health
🏥 Modification of Designation of Auditing Agency
🏥 Health & Social Welfare11 November 2008
Auditing Agency, Health Care Services, Verification New Zealand Limited, Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001
- Anthony Hill, Deputy Director-General, Sector Accountability & Funding, Ministry of Health
🏥 Guidelines Issued to Ethics Committee on Assisted Reproductive Technology
🏥 Health & Social WelfareAssisted Reproductive Technology, Guidelines, Surrogacy, Donation, Ethics Committee, ACART, ECART
NZ Gazette 2008, No 175