Clinical Loading Sample Clauses

The Clinical Loading clause defines the allocation of teaching or clinical responsibilities among staff, particularly in academic or healthcare settings. It typically outlines the expected number of clinical hours, patient loads, or teaching sessions assigned to each clinician or faculty member within a given period. By specifying these expectations, the clause ensures a fair and transparent distribution of workload, helping to prevent overburdening individuals and maintaining quality of care or instruction.
Clinical Loading. For the purposes of this clause, clinical loading will be the amount in clinical loading paid by the University to a Clinical Academic provided that such amount will not be less than the clinical loading prescribed in the Higher Education Industry Academic Staff Award 2020, as amended from time to time, for a medically qualified full-time Professor (Level E), Associate Professor (Level D), Senior Lecturer (Level C) and Lecturer (Level B) employed in a full clinical department in a medical school and responsible for patient care.
Clinical Loading. 11.4.1 For the purpose of clause 11.3, clinical loading shall be the amount paid by the University to a Clinical Academic responsible for patient care and employed in a department in a medical school in which a full clinical loading is paid under the respective University Enterprise Agreement or industrial instrument as in 11.3 above, provided that such amount shall not be less than the clinical loading prescribed in the Australian Universities Academic and Related Staff (Salaries) Award 1987, as amended from time to time, for a medically qualified full time Professor, Associate Professor, Senior Lecturer and Lecturer.
Clinical Loading. 21.1 On the advice of the Relevant Senior Officer, Clinical Loadings are paid to Professors, Associate Professors, Senior Lecturers and Lecturers in the School of Medicine and Dentistry and who have a current registration with the Australian Health Practitioners Regulation Agency (AHPRA). 21.2 Clinical Loadings are not generally paid to medical practitioners who are employed as research employees, except where they have patient-care responsibilities in the context of sessional services provided on behalf of the School to a teaching hospital. If research employees who are medical practitioners undertake clinical duties without direct remuneration, the Relevant Senior Officer may approve payment of a clinical loading where funds have been made available for that purpose. 21.3 Clinical Loadings are payable while on leave and as part of any eligible termination payment. Clinical loading amounts are set out in Schedule 3 of the Agreement and are paid fortnightly as part of salary.
Clinical Loading. 20.1 On the advice of the Pro Vice Chancellor, Health, Clinical Loadings are paid to professors, Associate Professors, Senior Lecturers and Lecturers in the Schools of Medicine or Oral health who have either a medical or a dental qualification. 20.2 Clinical Loadings are not generally paid to medical practitioners who are employed as research staff, except where they have patient-care responsibilities in the context of sessional services provided on behalf of the School to a teaching hospital. If research staff who are medical practitioners undertake clinical duties without direct remuneration, the Pro Vice Chancellor, health may approve payment of a clinical loading where funds have been made available for the purpose. 20.3 Clinical Loadings are payable while on leave and as part of any eligible termination payment. Clinical loading amounts are set out in Schedule 3 of the Agreement and are paid fortnightly as part of salary.
Clinical Loading. 11.4.1 For the purpose of clause 11.3, clinical loading shall be the amount paid by the University to a Clinical Academic responsible for patient care and employed in a department in a medical school in which a full clinical loading is paid under the respective University Enterprise Agreement as in 11.3 above, provided that such amount shall not be less than the clinical loading prescribed in the Australian Universities Academic and Related Staff (Salaries) Award 1987, as amended from time to time, for a medically qualified full time Professor, Associate Professor, Senior Lecturer and Lecturer. DH Clinical Academics Enterprise Agreement 2004 8 of 17 11.5 Adjustment of salary 11.5.1 Salaries shall be adjusted from time to time in accordance with the formula for the calculation of annual salary specified in clause 11.1 to reflect adjustments to the base salaries and clinical loading as specified in clauses 11.2 and 11.3 provided that

Related to Clinical Loading

  • Clinical Supply Servier shall be primarily responsible for manufacturing and supplying bulk Licensed Oligos and finished Licensed Products for use in clinical studies conducted pursuant to the Development Plan in the Field in the Territory, provided that Servier may engage Miragen for such manufacture and supply as follows: At least 180 days prior to the anticipated filing of the first CTA for the first indication with respect to a Licensed Product, Servier shall notify Miragen in writing whether it desires to engage Miragen for such manufacture and supply. If Servier chooses to have Miragen provide such clinical supply, Servier and Miragen shall negotiate in good faith and enter into a separate supply agreement having mutually agreed terms with respect to such clinical supply, which supply shall be at Cost of Goods (except for Unsponsored Work, in which case the supply shall be at Cost of Goods plus [*]). For clarity, Miragen’s manufacturing-related Development costs, as described in Section 1.27(e), [*] = Certain confidential information contained in this document, marked by brackets, is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to Rule 406 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. are not included in the Cost of Goods but shall be included in Development Plan Costs and shared by the Parties pursuant to Section 9.3. If Servier does not engage Miragen but elects to manufacture and supply bulk Licensed Oligos and finished Licensed Products for Development purposes, either through itself or its Third Party manufacturer, then Miragen shall have the right to purchase such bulk Licensed Oligos and finished Licensed Products from Servier at Cost of Goods (except for Unsponsored Work, in which case the supply shall be at Cost of Goods plus [*]), and the other terms and conditions to be agreed upon by the Parties and set forth in a separate supply agreement. For clarity, Miragen shall have the right to manufacture and have manufactured, anywhere in the world, the Licensed Oligos and Licensed Products for clinical and commercial use outside the Territory.

  • Random Drug Testing All employees covered by this Agreement shall be subject to random drug testing in accordance with Appendix D.

  • Durable Medical Equipment (DME), Medical Supplies, Prosthetic Devices, Enteral Formula or Food, and Hair Prosthesis (Wigs) This plan covers durable medical equipment and supplies, prosthetic devices and enteral formula or food as described in this section. DME is equipment which: • can withstand repeated use; • is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose; • is not useful to a person in the absence of an illness or injury; and • is for use in the home. DME includes supplies necessary for the effective use of the equipment. This plan covers the following DME: • wheelchairs, hospital beds, and other DME items used only for medical treatment; and • replacement of purchased equipment which is needed due to a change in your medical condition or if the device is not functional, no longer under warranty, or cannot be repaired. DME may be classified as a rental item or a purchased item. In most cases, this plan only pays for a rental DME up to our allowance for a purchased DME. Repairs and supplies for rental DME are included in the rental allowance. Medical supplies are consumable supplies that are disposable and not intended for re- use. Medical supplies require an order by a physician and must be essential for the care or treatment of an illness, injury, or congenital defect. Covered medical supplies include: • essential accessories such as hoses, tubes and mouthpieces for use with medically necessary DME (these accessories are included as part of the rental allowance for rented DME); • catheters, colostomy and ileostomy supplies, irrigation trays and surgical dressings; and • respiratory therapy equipment. This plan covers diabetic equipment and supplies for the treatment of diabetes in accordance with R.I. General Law §27-20-30. Covered diabetic equipment and supplies include: • therapeutic or molded shoes and inserts for custom-molded shoes for the prevention of amputation; • blood glucose monitors including those with special features for the legally blind, external insulin infusion pumps and accessories, insulin infusion devices and injection aids; and • lancets and test strips for glucose monitors including those with special features for the legally blind, and infusion sets for external insulin pumps. The amount you pay differs based on whether the equipment and supplies are bought from a durable medical equipment provider or from a pharmacy. See the Summary of Pharmacy Benefits and the Summary of Medical Benefits for details. Coverage for some diabetic equipment and supplies may only be available from either a DME provider or from a pharmacy. Visit our website to determine if this is applicable or call our Customer Service Department. Prosthetic devices replace or substitute all or part of an internal body part, including contiguous tissue, or replace all or part of the function of a permanently inoperative or malfunctioning body part and alleviate functional loss or impairment due to an illness, injury or congenital defect. Prosthetic devices do not include dental prosthetics. This plan covers the following prosthetic devices as required under R.I. General Law § 27-20-52: • prosthetic appliances such as artificial limbs, breasts, larynxes and eyes; • replacement or adjustment of prosthetic appliances if there is a change in your medical condition or if the device is not functional, no longer under warranty and cannot be repaired; • devices, accessories, batteries and supplies necessary for prosthetic devices; • orthopedic braces except corrective shoes and orthotic devices used in connection with footwear; and • breast prosthesis following a mastectomy, in accordance with the Women’s Health and Cancer Rights Act of 1998 and R.I. General Law 27-20-29. The prosthetic device must be ordered or provided by a physician, or by a provider under the direction of a physician. When you are prescribed a prosthetic device as an inpatient and it is billed by a provider other than the hospital where you are an inpatient, the outpatient benefit limit will apply. Enteral formula or food is nutrition that is absorbed through the intestinal tract, whether delivered through a feeding tube or taken orally. Enteral nutrition is covered when it is the sole source of nutrition and prescribed by the physician for home use. In accordance with R.I. General Law §27-20-56, this plan covers enteral formula taken orally for the treatment of: • malabsorption caused by Crohn’s Disease; • ulcerative colitis; • gastroesophageal reflux; • chronic intestinal pseudo obstruction; and • inherited diseases of amino acids and organic acids. Food products modified to be low protein are covered for the treatment of inherited diseases of amino acids and organic acids. Preauthorization may be required. The amount that you pay may differ depending on whether the nutrition is delivered through a feeding tube or taken orally. When enteral formula is delivered through a feeding tube, associated supplies are also covered. This plan covers hair prosthetics (wigs) worn for hair loss suffered as a result of cancer treatment in accordance with R.I. General Law § 27-20-54 and subject to the benefit limit and copayment listed in the Summary of Medical Benefits. This plan will reimburse the lesser of the provider’s charge or the benefit limit shown in the Summary of Medical Benefits. If the provider’s charge is more than the benefit limit, you are responsible for paying any difference. This plan covers Early Intervention Services in accordance with R.I. General Law §27- 20-50. Early Intervention Services are educational, developmental, health, and social services provided to children from birth to thirty-six (36) months. The child must be certified by the Rhode Island Department of Human Services (DHS) to enroll in an approved Early Intervention Services program. Services must be provided by a licensed Early Intervention provider and rendered to a Rhode Island resident. Members not living in Rhode Island may seek services from the state in which they reside; however, those services are not covered under this plan. Early Intervention Services as defined by DHS include but are not limited to the following: • speech and language therapy; • physical and occupational therapy; • evaluation; • case management; • nutrition; • service plan development and review; • nursing services; and • assistive technology services and devices.

  • Clinical Studies The animal and other preclinical studies and clinical trials conducted by the Company or on behalf of the Company were, and, if still pending are, to the Company’s knowledge, being conducted in all material respects in compliance with all Applicable Laws and in accordance with experimental protocols, procedures and controls generally used by qualified experts in the preclinical study and clinical trials of new drugs and biologics as applied to comparable products to those being developed by the Company; the descriptions of the results of such preclinical studies and clinical trials contained in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus are accurate and complete in all material respects, and, except as set forth in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus, the Company has no knowledge of any other clinical trials or preclinical studies, the results of which reasonably call into question the clinical trial or preclinical study results described or referred to in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus when viewed in the context in which such results are described; and the Company has not received any written notices or correspondence from the FDA, the EMA, or any other domestic or foreign governmental agency requiring the termination, suspension or modification of any preclinical studies or clinical trials conducted by or on behalf of the Company that are described in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus or the results of which are referred to in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus.

  • Clinical Trials The studies, tests and preclinical and clinical trials conducted by or on behalf of, or sponsored by, the Company, or in which the Company has participated, that are described in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus, or the results of which are referred to in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus, were and, if still pending, are being conducted in all material respects in accordance with protocols, procedures and controls pursuant to, where applicable, accepted professional and scientific standards for products or product candidates comparable to those being developed by the Company and all applicable statutes, rules and regulations of the FDA, the EMA, Health Canada and other comparable regulatory agencies outside of the U.S. to which they are subject, including, without limitation, 21 C.F.R. Parts 50, 54, 56, 58, 312, and 812; the descriptions of the results of such studies, tests and trials contained in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus do not contain any misstatement of a material fact or omit a material fact necessary to make such statements not misleading; the Company has no knowledge of any studies, tests or trials not described in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus the results of which reasonably call into question in any material respect the results of the studies, tests and trials described in the Registration Statement or Prospectus; and the Company has not received any notices or other correspondence from the FDA, EMA, Health Canada or any other foreign, state or local governmental body exercising comparable authority or any Institutional Review Board or comparable authority requiring or threatening the termination, suspension or material modification of any studies, tests or preclinical or clinical trials conducted by or on behalf of, or sponsored by, the Company or in which the Company has participated, and, to the Company’s knowledge, there are no reasonable grounds for the same. Except as disclosed in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus, there has not been any violation of law or regulation by the Company in its respective product development efforts, submissions or reports to any regulatory authority that could reasonably be expected to require investigation, corrective action or enforcement action.