Registered in Australia?
Registered in Australia? This applies to chiropractors registered in all Australian states and territories except Western Australia.
Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act 1997
Information on applying for registration in New Zealand as a Chiropractor
Background
In August 1997 the New Zealand Parliament enacted the Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act. This Act came into force by Order-in-Council on 1 May 1998. It recognises the regulatory standards adopted in Australia regarding goods and occupations.
Mutual Recognition Principle
The Act allows persons registered in Australia and New Zealand who practise substantially the same registered occupations, to move freely between both countries. For those professions where there is State registration in Australia, participation in this process applies to New Zealand and those States which have enacted similar legislation.
If you are registered to practise chiropractic or an equivalent occupation in a participating Australian jurisdiction, you are entitled to seek registration in the equivalent occupation in New Zealand. This right is exercised by giving a written notice in the form of a statutory declaration, paying the application fee, providing evidence of entitlement to practise your occupation by supplying a current practising certificate/licence or other document evidencing current entitlement to practise chiropractic (application form).
Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition therefore provides an alternative avenue for obtaining registration in New Zealand. Applicants have the choice of applying for registration under the Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act or under the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act 2003.
Chiropractic
Chiropractors remain accountable for acting with appropriate professionalism as required by the statutes of each jurisdiction. In New Zealand the practice of chiropractic is governed by the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act 2003. If the Board grants you registration you will be sent an Application form for a Practising Certificate (there is a seperate fee). All registered chiropractors are required by law to hold a current Annual Practising Certificate to practise chiropractic in New Zealand.
Application Process
Within one month of your written notice, details, and fee being received by the Chiropractic Board, your application for registration will either be granted, postponed, or refused.
The Board makes inquiries of the authorities of any jurisdictions in which you are registered to ensure that the information supplied on your application form is correct, and to establish whether there are any conditions or restrictions relating to your registration in those jurisdictions.
The Board makes inquiries of the authorities of any jurisdictions in which you are registered regarding your activities in chiropractic and any matters relevant to your written notice.
The Board may postpone or refuse the grant of registration if:
- Any of the statements or information in the notice required by section 19 are materially false or misleading; or
- Any document or information required is materially false or misleading; or
- Any document required has not been provided; or
- The Board determines that the occupation in which registration is sought is not an equivalent occupation, and that equivalence cannot be achieved by the imposition of conditions.
- The circumstances of the applicant have materially changed since the date of the notice or the date it was given.
Pending the grant or refusal of registration, you are deemed to be registered and are entitled to practise chiropractic in New Zealand. The Board may impose conditions on deemed registration to achieve equivalence of occupations, to match conditions that apply to your registration in an Australian jurisdiction, or to implement the Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition principle in relation to occupations.
Deemed registrants are notified of the Board's decision within one month of their date of giving written notice. There is a right of review of the Board's decision to impose conditions on, or to postpone the grant of, or to refuse the grant of registration.
Once granted, registration takes effect as if it had been granted immediately on the giving of the written notice.