(1) A medical practitioner (whether that practitioner is a medical officer or not) may carry out medical treatment on an inmate without the inmate's consent if the Chief Executive, Justice Health is of the opinion, having taken into account the cultural background and religious views of the inmate, that it is necessary to do so in order to save the inmate's life or to prevent serious damage to the inmate's health.
(2) Medical treatment carried out on an inmate under this section is, for all purposes, taken to have been carried out with the inmate's consent.
(3) Nothing in this section relieves a medical practitioner from liability in respect of the carrying out of medical treatment on an inmate, being a liability to which the medical practitioner would have been subject had the treatment been carried out with the inmate's consent.
(4) If the Chief Executive, Justice Health is not a medical practitioner, the reference to the Chief Executive, Justice Health in subsection (1) is taken to be a reference to a person, designated by the Chief Executive for the purposes of that subsection, who is a medical practitioner.