0 to officially recognize, accept, or approve of someone or something:
Nurses were more positive about attending training courses, particularly those accredited for higher degrees.
Other professionals (nurses and medical physicists) held a reserved view in delegating their tasks to radiographers, even after accredited clinical training.
In addition, other outreach programmes are limited to single days in the year or a monthly public lecture, and are not accredited courses.
But the school had to comply when accrediting bodies passed those ethics teaching requirements in the mid 1990s.
Even when accrediting bodies set their ethics teaching requirements, the school complied halfheartedly.
The government also overturned its earlier decision not to accredit foreign diplomats to observe the elections.
Again, samples are generally sent to a convenient accredited laboratory for determination of analytes found to be present in phase 2 of the project.
For a program to be successfully accredited, these competencies either must be addressed or a plan to address them must be in development.