In-house definition

In-house means a permanent employee. (A permanent employee is not an independent contractor employed for purposes of lead - based paint abatement activities.)
In-house means continuing legal education programs sponsored by a single private law firm, a single corporate law department, or a single federal, state, or local governmental entity where the only participants are members or employees of the firm, department, or entity.
In-house means on the premises at the health care institution.

More Definitions of In-house

In-house means being physically present in the trauma center and responding immediately upon trauma team activation. Arrive to the patient treatment area within ten (10) minutes of placement of call with a minimum documented compliance rate of 80% for each calendar month, and in no case greater than fifteen (15) minutes from time call is placed.
In-house means courses or services available only to employees of an entity or for members of an association.
In-house means being physically present in the trauma center, unencumbered with conflicting duties, and responding without delay upon activation. Arriving to the patient treatment area within ten (10) minutes of activation with a minimum documented compliance rate of 80% for each calendar month, with no single instance being greater than fifteen (15) minutes from activation.
In-house. , means an approved insurance continuing education course that is available only for employees of a course provider or for members of an association, or for which eligibility for registration requires affiliation with the course provider.
In-house means present at all times and immediately available to the trauma center or hospital. On call personnel are not considered in house.
In-house means courses or services available only to employees of an entity or for members of an association. “Entity” means any person, partnership, organization, association, or corporation, which is approved by the Department to conduct pre-licensing courses.
In-house means that a single public body has a majority share of the capital, totalling at least 67%, that the minority shareholders have no particular rights, and that the public entity has majority control over the decision-making bodies and appointment of the executive or governing body of the in-house structure.