DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE Sample Clauses

The "Details of Occurrence" clause requires the parties to provide specific information about an incident or event relevant to the agreement, such as the time, place, and circumstances under which it happened. In practice, this clause is often used in insurance policies or incident reports, where the insured must describe the nature of a loss, accident, or claim in detail. By mandating clear and thorough disclosure of the facts surrounding an occurrence, this clause ensures that all parties have a shared understanding of the event, which helps in assessing liability, processing claims, or determining coverage.
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of how the occurrence affected your practice/workload: Check one: Is this an isolated incident? An ongoing problem? Applicable Regulatory College: Applicable Standards of Practice/Policies/Procedures:
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide details of how the residents well being was potentially or actually compromised. Please identify the Nursing Standard(s)/Practice Guidelines/Best Practices or employer policy that are believed to be at risk: Is this an: Isolated incident? Ongoing problem? (when in outbreak) (Check one)
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of the occurrence and how the occurrence affected your practice workload: Provide/identify the CNO standard(s)/practice guidelines, including the Nurse Practitioner Practice Standard, or organization/employer policies that are believed to be at risk: Is this an: Isolated incident? Ongoing problem? (Check one)
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of the occurrence and how it impacted patient care: Identify the Nursing Standard(s)/Practice Guidelines or hospital/unit policies that are believed to be at risk and why: ☐ Medication ☐ Documentation ☐ Professional Standards – Specify ☐ Therapeutic nurse/client relationship ☐ RN and RPN Practice, the Client, the Nurse and the EnvironmentWorking with Unregulated Care Providers (Check all that apply) ☐ Personal Support Workers/Aides ☐ Volunteers ☐ Students ☐ Physician Assistants ☐ Working in different roles ☐ Telepractice ☐ Consent ☐ Clinical pathways/medical directives ☐ Supporting Learners ☐ Disagreeing with the Plan of Care ☐ Guiding Decisions about End of Life CareEmployer policy – Specify (include policy if able) ☐ Other Why: Is this an ☐ Isolated incident? ☐ Ongoing problem? (Check one)
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of the occurrence and how it impacted patient care: Provide identify the Nursing Standard(s)/Practice Guidelines or hospital/unit policies that are believed to be at risk: Is this an: Isolated incident? Ongoing problem? (Check one)
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of the occurrence and how the occurrence affected your practice work
DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE. Provide a concise summary of the occurrence Is this an isolated incident? 0 or, an on-going problem? 0 Has it been reported before? Yes O No 0

Related to DETAILS OF OCCURRENCE

  • NUMBER OF OCCUPANTS Tenant agrees that the House shall be occupied by no more than [Total Number of Occupants] persons, including no more than [Maximum Number of Children] under the age of eighteen (18) years, without the prior written consent of Landlord.

  • Conditions of Occupancy The Resident may not occupy a Room, unless (i) the Resident is currently enrolled and maintaining status as a full- time student in good standing at the Institution; (ii) this Agreement is executed by all parties; (iii) all Residence Fees then due and payable are paid in full as stated in section 2.03; (iv) the Manager has designated a Room for the Resident and (v) the Resident meets any additional conditions to occupancy established by the Institution, including any vaccination conditions.

  • Certificate of Occupancy The Contractor’s obligation under the Contract is to install the Work in accordance with the Contract Documents, obtain the Certificate of Occupancy from the State Fire Marshal or his deputy, and forward it to the Design Professional as a part of the final close out procedures. The Design Professional’s obligation is to design the Work to comply with the applicable codes and to qualify for a Certificate of Occupancy.

  • Name Collision Occurrence Management 6.1. No-­‐Activation Period. Registry Operator shall not activate any names in the DNS zone for the Registry TLD (except for "NIC") until at least 120 calendar days after the effective date of this agreement. Registry Operator may allocate names (subject to subsection 6.2 below) during this period only if Registry Operator causes registrants to be clearly informed of the inability to activate names until the No-­‐Activation Period ends.

  • Name Collision Occurrence Assessment 6.2.1 Registry Operator shall not activate any names in the DNS zone for the Registry TLD except in compliance with a Name Collision Occurrence Assessment provided by ICANN regarding the Registry TLD. Registry Operator will either (A) implement the mitigation measures described in its Name Collision Occurrence Assessment before activating any second-­‐level domain name, or (B) block those second-­‐level domain names for which the mitigation measures as described in the Name Collision Occurrence Assessment have not been implemented and proceed with activating names that are not listed in the Assessment. 6.2.2 Notwithstanding subsection 6.2.1, Registry Operator may proceed with activation of names in the DNS zone without implementation of the measures set forth in Section 6.2.1 only if (A) ICANN determines that the Registry TLD is eligible for this alternative path to activation of names; and (B) Registry Operator blocks all second-­‐level domain names identified by ICANN and set forth at <▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/en/announcements-­‐and-­‐ media/announcement-­‐2-­‐17nov13-­‐en> as such list may be modified by ICANN from time to time. Registry Operator may activate names pursuant to this subsection and later activate names pursuant to subsection 6.2.1. 6.2.3 The sets of names subject to mitigation or blocking pursuant to Sections 6.2.1 and 6.2.2 will be based on ICANN analysis of DNS information including "Day in the Life of the Internet" data maintained by the DNS Operations, Analysis, and Research Center (DNS-­‐OARC) <▇▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇.▇▇▇-­‐▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇>. 6.2.4 Registry Operator may participate in the development by the ICANN community of a process for determining whether and how these blocked names may be released. 6.2.5 If ICANN determines that the TLD is ineligible for the alternative path to activation of names, ICANN may elect not to delegate the TLD pending completion of the final Name Collision Occurrence Assessment for the TLD, and Registry Operator’s completion of all required mitigation measures. Registry Operator understands that the mitigation measures required by ICANN as a condition to activation of names in the DNS zone for the TLD may include, without limitation, mitigation measures such as those described in Section 3.2 of the New gTLD Name Collision Occurrence Management Plan approved by the ICANN Board New gTLD Program Committee (NGPC) on 7 October 2013 as found at <▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/en/groups/board/documents/resolutions-­‐ new-­‐gtld-­‐annex-­‐1-­‐07oct13-­‐en.pdf>.