Checklists. The Renter shall use the aircraft manufacturer’s recommended pre-takeoff, takeoff, cruise, pre-landing and landing checklist or a suitable checklist provided by Tailwind.
Checklists. The Customer shall use the manufacturer's recommended pre-takeoff, take-off, cruise, pre-landing, and post-landing checklists. Checklists are provided for each aircraft.
Checklists. Risk evaluation techniques/matrix
Checklists. The system shall provide the current checklist of documents that the customer is required to provide based on the type of service request.
Checklists. The following checklists are provided: Local Jurisdiction Operational Area OAMA Coordinator Each checklist is further divided into the following format: Normal day-to-day operations Activation for jurisdictions requesting and responding to mutual aid requests Deactivation
Checklists. Checklists replicate the Control Points in the CPCC, and are therefore also composed of modular sections (called “modules”). There are three checklist types in GLOBALGAP (EUREPGAP):
a) The checklist used for inspection of producers, which contains all the control points and must be used during inspection by the CB. The checklist can also be used by the producer/group when performing the self-assessments.
b) The QMS Checklist used for auditing producer group Quality Management Systems, which contains all the requirements detailed in Part III – Group Certification, must be used during audits by the CB. The producer group when performing internal Quality Management Systems audits can also use this checklist.
c) The Benchmarking Cross-Reference Checklist (BMCL) or the Approved Modified Checklist (AMC) used by applicant scheme owners applying for benchmarking against GLOBALGAP (EUREPGAP) to show equivalence (See GLOBALGAP (EUREPGAP) General Regulations
Checklists. Checklists shall be maintained by the project professional in the service work area during the production of the project. Upon project completion, the checklist shall be bound into the project quality control file.
Checklists. Adapted from the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND) Original resource, not adapted Questions based on AHRQ domains for research studiesa Questions based on principles of the GRADE processb 3 checklists (1 for non-humans) • Primary research (humans or animals) and review article 6 checklists • RCT, cohort, case-control, review/meta- analysis, diagnostic, economic 63 questions per checklist • 4 relevance, 10 validity questions with sub-questions Number of questions vary by checklist • Range from 11 (economic) to 17 (cohort) Answers to checklist questions: Yes No Unclear N/A Answers to checklist questions: Yes No Don’t know Does not apply Quality ratings assigned according to answers to specific questions Quality ratings assigned subjectively based on checklist and reviewer judgement Quality ratings: - (negative quality) o (neutral quality) + (positive quality) Quality ratings: o (low quality – most criteria not met) + (acceptable – most criteria met) ++ (high quality – majority of criteria met) aAHRQ: Agency for Healthcare and Research Quality [116] bGRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation [118] The GMDI-SERC process involves fewer checklists with more questions compared to SIGN checklists which include checklists specific to each study type with fewer, more specific questions. The GMDI-SERC method includes an objective measure of quality, requiring specific answers to specific questions to assign quality ratings. SIGN, on the other hand, requires an overall subjective assessment of the completed checklist and general study by the reviewer to designate study quality. Both methods have pros and cons, but both are appropriate in nutrition research. A full guide to the AND Evidence Analysis Process is available online (xxxxx://xxx.xxxxxx.xxx/files/Docs/2012_Jan_EA_Manual.pdf), as is the SIGN Methodology Handbook (xxxx://xxx.xxxx.xx.xx/pdf/qrg50.pdf).
Checklists. Sample Knitting Agreement V1 April 2021
Checklists. These checklists are intended as an aid in the preparation of a research project that is compliant with the Access and Benefit Sharing system. 42 43