0 to make a new product, service, or system available for the first time:
1 an occasion when a new product or service is gradually made available to more people after it has first been tested in a particular area:
rollout of sth Rollout of the new technology has been slow.
a product rollout
Ongoing dialogue, operational research, and incorporation of learning experiences will be essential components of the roll-out process.
So roll-out programs should begin where healthcare facilities exist, and every effort must be made to include deprived areas as rapidly as possible.
Owing to the high costs of infrastructure roll-out for broadband technologies, it is difficult for a company to justify providing coverage in less-populated areas.
Further research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of the roll-out of extended and supplementary prescribing and to examine support mechanisms for nurses in their prescribing practice across all settings.
Any decision on future roll-out will be taken in light of the research findings which will also indicate the likely costs.
It is anticipated that the roll-out programme presently being established, will be extended to cover outpatients.
That is a minority of the country and cannot therefore be caricatured as national roll-out.
He referred to multi-agency working, and it is only a matter of time before he starts talking about roll-out, joined-up government and pilots.