Laboratory station definition

Laboratory station means a facility for the collection, processing and transmission of specimens derived from the human body.

Examples of Laboratory station in a sentence

  • Laboratory station classes (science, computer, drafting) and MMC English classes shall not exceed thirty (30) students unless the teacher has granted permission to do so.

  • Laboratory station classes, expository writing and composition classes, shall be limited to thirty (30) students subject to the one-hundred-fifty (150) student daily limit.

  • Laboratory station classes, expository writing and composition classes, shall be limited to thirty (30) students.

  • Laboratory station classes (science, computer, drafting) and MMC English classes shall not exceed thirty (30) students unless the teacher has granted permission to do so and the board pays for the overage, but these classes will not exceed the upper cap class size of thirty-four (34) students.

Related to Laboratory station

  • Radiation therapy simulation system means a radiographic or fluoroscopic x-ray system intended for localizing the volume to be exposed during radiation therapy and confirming the position and size of the therapeutic irradiation field.

  • Laboratory or “LANL” means the geographical location of Los Alamos National Laboratory, a federally funded research and development center owned by the DOE / NNSA.

  • Bioassay means the determination of kinds, quantities or concentrations, and, in some cases, the locations of radioactive material in the human body, whether by direct measurement, in vivo counting, or by analysis and evaluation of materials excreted or removed from the human body. For purposes of these regulations, "radiobioassay" is an equivalent term.

  • Technology startup company means a for profit business that

  • Study Materials means all the materials and information created for the Study, or required to be submitted to the Sponsor including all data, results, Biological Samples, Case Report Forms (or their equivalent) in whatever form held, conclusions, discoveries, inventions, know-how and the like, whether patentable or not, relating to the Study, which are discovered or developed as a result of the Study, but excluding the Institution’s ordinary patient records.