The Medical Board of Australia has developed the following registration standards: Mandatory registration standards With the exception of registered students and non-practising registrants, the following standards apply to all applicants for registration and registered medical practitioners. These CPD requirements and guidelines explaining them are available on the Codes and Guidelines page. The guidelines aim to inform registered medical practitioners and the community about the Board’s expectations of medical practitioners who perform cosmetic medical and surgical procedures in Australia. The supply of employed medical practitioners continued to grow in 2015. The Medical Board of Australia referred a notification in relation to the professional conduct of Dr Anthony Sangster to South Australian Health Practitioners Tribunal for determination. Under Section 38 of the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law as in force in each state and territory, the Medical Radiation Practice Board of Australia (the Board) must develop and recommend to Ministerial Council mandatory registration standards and any other standards relevant to the eligibility of individuals for registration in the profession. In 1943, National Security (General) Regulations, No. Medical radiation practitioners must complete a minimum of 60 hours of self-directed CPD activities over a three year cycle, with a minimum of 10 hours in any one year; or comply with the requirements of a CPD program approved by the Medical Radiation Practice Board. These annual lists of registered medical practitioners in New South Wales provide the following information about each practitioner: registration number, full name and address, and registered qualifications. The Medical Workforce Survey contains information on medical practitioners who are registered with the Medical Board of Australia through the National Registration and Accreditation Scheme (NRAS) introduced on 1 July 2010.
The list was published annually in the NSW Government Gazette until 1942.