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词汇 caseload
释义

Definition of caseload in English:

caseload

nounˈkeɪsləʊdˈkeɪsˌloʊd
  • The number of cases with which a doctor, lawyer, or social worker is concerned at one time.

    (医生、律师或社会工作者以处理案例为计算单位的)工作量

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Intensive case management emphasises small caseloads (10-15 patients per case manager), with increased intensity of contact.
    • Since acuity and complexity of patient caseloads continue to increase, inadequate funding presents a particular challenge to recruitment of highly qualified nursing staff.
    • The definitions also make an important distinction regarding the degree of clinical responsibility for clinician's caseloads that supervisors, consultants, or trainers assume.
    • To be included in the study, officers needed to be adult probation officers and carry an active caseload of probationers whom they monitored.
    • While many of these individuals are able lawyers, they are often overburdened with heavy caseloads and lack the financial and personnel resources necessary to build a strong defense.
    • Coroners should not allocate excessive numbers of autopsies to individual pathologists, and the total caseloads of pathologists should be monitored.
    • Few researchers concerned with social work practice relative to substance-abusing clients have elicited detailed information about workers' caseloads.
    • We need to ensure that there are enough doctors on duty at all sites to comply with the law and guarantee that caseloads are such that training and supervision of junior doctors will be satisfactory.
    • For the past two decades, program staff have had to submit monthly reports on the progress of patients assigned to their caseloads.
    • Most general practitioners thought that practices with a high caseload of refugees should receive additional funding.
    • It addresses issues that are common to all perioperative managers, regardless of the size of their yearly caseload.
    • There, seven full and part-time nurses carry caseloads, helping patients set goals and monitoring their progress in exercise programs and classes.
    • The total caseloads of patients managed by both teams were similar in demographics, medical condition, and workload.
    • Given the caseloads of medical examiners, the quality of their science is sometimes suspect.
    • Reasons suggested for the poor outcome in clinic cases include that they have more severe problems, come from more distressed families, and receive less empirically supported interventions from staff with heavier caseloads.
    • First, our results are based on responses from hospital personnel at a sample of PCP hospitals in four high-HIV-incidence cities and other US hospitals with low HIV caseloads.
    • As evidenced over the past year, class-action lawyers see their caseloads balloon during eras of corporate fraud.
    • Nutritionists' scope of practice must be clearly defined and actual caseloads monitored.
    • In some areas, health visitors are taking a leading role in working with refugee families, extending their caseloads to include families with children over 5 years of age.
    • Because their caseloads are diverse geographically, health visitors have much less detailed knowledge of who is living in a specific local area.

Definition of caseload in US English:

caseload

nounˈkāsˌlōdˈkeɪsˌloʊd
  • The amount of work (in terms of number of cases) with which a doctor, lawyer, or social worker is concerned at one time.

    (医生、律师或社会工作者以处理案例为计算单位的)工作量

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As evidenced over the past year, class-action lawyers see their caseloads balloon during eras of corporate fraud.
    • Because their caseloads are diverse geographically, health visitors have much less detailed knowledge of who is living in a specific local area.
    • First, our results are based on responses from hospital personnel at a sample of PCP hospitals in four high-HIV-incidence cities and other US hospitals with low HIV caseloads.
    • Coroners should not allocate excessive numbers of autopsies to individual pathologists, and the total caseloads of pathologists should be monitored.
    • The definitions also make an important distinction regarding the degree of clinical responsibility for clinician's caseloads that supervisors, consultants, or trainers assume.
    • Most general practitioners thought that practices with a high caseload of refugees should receive additional funding.
    • Intensive case management emphasises small caseloads (10-15 patients per case manager), with increased intensity of contact.
    • The total caseloads of patients managed by both teams were similar in demographics, medical condition, and workload.
    • To be included in the study, officers needed to be adult probation officers and carry an active caseload of probationers whom they monitored.
    • For the past two decades, program staff have had to submit monthly reports on the progress of patients assigned to their caseloads.
    • In some areas, health visitors are taking a leading role in working with refugee families, extending their caseloads to include families with children over 5 years of age.
    • While many of these individuals are able lawyers, they are often overburdened with heavy caseloads and lack the financial and personnel resources necessary to build a strong defense.
    • Few researchers concerned with social work practice relative to substance-abusing clients have elicited detailed information about workers' caseloads.
    • We need to ensure that there are enough doctors on duty at all sites to comply with the law and guarantee that caseloads are such that training and supervision of junior doctors will be satisfactory.
    • It addresses issues that are common to all perioperative managers, regardless of the size of their yearly caseload.
    • Given the caseloads of medical examiners, the quality of their science is sometimes suspect.
    • Reasons suggested for the poor outcome in clinic cases include that they have more severe problems, come from more distressed families, and receive less empirically supported interventions from staff with heavier caseloads.
    • Nutritionists' scope of practice must be clearly defined and actual caseloads monitored.
    • There, seven full and part-time nurses carry caseloads, helping patients set goals and monitoring their progress in exercise programs and classes.
    • Since acuity and complexity of patient caseloads continue to increase, inadequate funding presents a particular challenge to recruitment of highly qualified nursing staff.
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