workload


Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Acronyms, Wikipedia.

workload

A generic term for the amount of work performed by a consultant or other professional; workload data must reflect the complexity of the cases analysed.
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Cloud workload protection solutions can monitor and secure application on private, public, and hybrid cloud environments.
Terma supports any job scheduler, including IBM Workload Scheduler (IWS), CA AutoSys, CA7, and Tidal Workload Automation.
The research team compiled all of that information and created multiple statistical models to evaluate the relationships between objective and subjective workload measures and quality of care.
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said they had "undertaken a range of actions to reduce teacher workload" and "made an improved pay offer".
Cardiff UCU spokesman Dr Andy Williams said: "We've published this open letter because Cardiff University has a major problem with staff workload and mental health.
With the campaigns in public health and aged care heating up, as well as bargaining in private health, we thought it timely to revisit some recent questions in these sectors about workloads.
For all the hype and attention associated with infrastructure as a service (IaaS), 451 Research notes that just 6% of enterprise workloads are currently running on IaaS, representing a small piece of applications run, and the smallest portion for any public or private cloud type today.
METHOD In order to begin an examination of faculty workload in nursing, existing workloads must be known.
"Cognitive performance deficits of children dramatically increase as cognitive workload of tasks increases and pregnancy duration decreases," says Dr Julia Jakel from the Ruhr-Universitat.
A recent survey found 40 percent of physicians said they had an unsafe workload at least once a month, and 36 percent said they have an unsafe workload on a weekly basis.