Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
Occupation specific clothing is clothing that distinctively identifies you as belonging to a particular profession, trade, vocation, occupation or calling. To determine this, disregard any feature of the clothing that distinctively identifies you as a person associated (directly or indirectly) with:
(a) your employer; or
(b) a group consisting of your employer and one or more of your employer's * associates.
Example:
Occupation specific clothing includes a nurse's uniform, a chef's checked pants and a religious cleric's ceremonial robes.
34-20(2)
Protective clothing is clothing of a kind that you mainly use to protect yourself, or someone else, from risk of:
(a) death; or
(b) * disease (including the contraction, aggravation, acceleration or recurrence of a disease); or
(c) injury (including the aggravation, acceleration or recurrence of an injury); or
(d) damage to clothing; or
(e) damage to an artificial limb or other artificial substitute, or to a medical, surgical or other similar aid or appliance.
Example:
Protective clothing includes overalls, aprons, goggles, hard hats and safety boots, when worn to protect the wearer.
Meaning of disease
34-20(3)
Disease includes any mental or physical ailment, disorder, defect or morbid condition, whether of sudden onset or gradual development and whether of genetic or other origin.
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