Observership


Also found in: Medical.

Ob`serv´er`ship


n.1.The office or work of an observer.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
ABU DHABI, 31st July, 2019 (WAM) -- The second edition of Future Medical Stars, a collaborative initiative between Al Bayt Mitwahid Association, VPS Healthcare and Fatima College of Health Sciences, came to a conclusion after five Emirati nurses returned from a two-week intensive medical research observership, working alongside field experts in the Unites States.
She said that through her observership, she had seen and come to understand that there is no exclusive characterisation of professionalism.
Tribune News Network Doha Students at Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar (WCM-Q) got a glimpse of what life as a practising physician is really like, thanks to the Pre-medical Education Division's Clinical Observership Program.
Students at Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar (WCM-Q) got a glimpse of what life as a practicing physician is really like thanks to the Pre-medical Education Division's Clinical Observership Program.
Internationally, students will undertake research and clinical observership placements at prestigious institutions, including Mayo Clinic, Louis University, and Joslin Diabetes Centre in the US.
In India, on request, curriculum based observership at an established SCT unit is a usual practice to gain experience and confidence.
As a possible application of the proposed filters, the position and speed estimation of sea targets using angle measurements in azimuth and elevation from the observership's video camera is considered.
They also noted Georgia's application to become a member of the Energy Community and Armenia's active observership in the Energy Community.
Marans is an active member of REBNY's private Early Access Program, New York University's Bronfman Center's Alumni Advisory Board, and the WA-Federation of New York and its Observership Program.
* Should the United States also support Taiwan's observership status (if not membership) in international organizations, such as the World Health Organization (WHO), International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), and U.N.
She argues for a conception of active observership that is predicated on embodiment, which is the key to Bakhtin's understanding of aesthetics.