网友您好, 请在下方输入框内输入要搜索的题目:

题目内容 (请给出正确答案)

A healthcare and life sciences client wants to maintain electronic patient records, including medical images, for a period of seven years. How would the IT storage industry describe this business goal?()

  • A、an archive solution that requires event-based retention
  • B、a backup solution that provides version-based expiration
  • C、a PACS environment that provides two year litigation hold
  • D、a business continuity solution that provides two years Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

参考答案

更多 “A healthcare and life sciences client wants to maintain electronic patient records, including medical images, for a period of seven years. How would the IT storage industry describe this business goal?()A、an archive solution that requires event-based retentionB、a backup solution that provides version-based expirationC、a PACS environment that provides two year litigation holdD、a business continuity solution that provides two years Recovery Time Objective (RTO)” 相关考题
考题 Bachelor of Sciences(英译汉)

考题 ___ is similar to whole life insurance except that the insured pays premium for only a limited number of years. A.term life insuranceB.whole life insuranceC.limited payment life insuranceD.endowment life insurance

考题 Please choose a correct name for “救生圈”.A.life buoyB.life jacketC.life raft

考题 If a davit-launched life raft aboard a vessel cannot be launched because of damage to the davit, you should ______.A.inflate the life raft on deckB.roll the life raft over the sideC.go to another life raft stationD.get a saw and cut the life raft free

考题 The Healthcare community was shocked ( )Ricardo Peter's resignation after only one year as president of Healthcorps. A. in B. up C. of D. by

考题 If there were life on Mars, such life forms()unable to survive on earthAisBareCwould beDwill be

考题 Thomson Healthcare公司出版的是()

考题 Which of the following is not the life-saving equipment? ()A、Lifeboat.B、Life-raft .C、Life rail.D、Lifebuoy.

考题 希尔密码是数学家Lester Hill于1929年在()杂志上首次提出。A、《American Mathematical Monthly》B、《American Mathematical Sciences》C、《Studies in Mathematical Sciences》D、《Studies in Mathematical Monthly》

考题 A ()(救生圈) should be located on the gangway.A、life-jacketB、life-raftC、life-buoyD、life-boat

考题 A ()should be placed on the gangway.A、life-buoyB、life-raftC、life-boatD、life craft

考题 Why can security on healthcare networks be an important issue for customers?()A、offers a rapid return on investmentB、telecommutingC、multiple network connectionsD、legal mandates

考题 救生筏的英文是()。A、LIFE VESTB、LIFE RAFTC、LIFE STRAPD、LIFE ANCHOR

考题 单选题If a davit-launched life raft aboard a vessel cannot be launched because of damage to the davit,you should().A inflate the life raft on deckB roll the life raft over the sideC go to another life raft stationD get a saw and cut the life raft free

考题 单选题希尔密码是数学家Lester Hill于1929年在()杂志上首次提出。A 《American Mathematical Monthly》B 《American Mathematical Sciences》C 《Studies in Mathematical Sciences》D 《Studies in Mathematical Monthly》

考题 单选题A healthcare and life sciences client wants to maintain electronic patient records, including medical images, for a period of seven years. How would the IT storage industry describe this business goal?()A an archive solution that requires event-based retentionB a backup solution that provides version-based expirationC a PACS environment that provides two year litigation holdD a business continuity solution that provides two years Recovery Time Objective (RTO)

考题 单选题气胀式救生衣()A inflatable life-jacketB inflatable life-raftC flammable life-jacketD inflammable life-jacket

考题 单选题What kind of life has Jack lived?A A short life.B An interesting life.C A lonely life.D A poor life.

考题 问答题Directions: In this section, there is one passage followed by 5 questions. Read the passage carefully, then answer the questions in as few words as possible (not more than 10 words). Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet.  Questions 1-5 are based on the following passage.  If you were on a distant planet, and if you had instruments that could tell you the composition of Earth’s atmosphere, how would you know there was life on this planet?Water in the atmosphere would suggest there could be water on the surface, and as we all know water is considered crucial to life. But water would only suggest that life is possible. It wouldn’t prove it’s there.  Carbon? That basic component of “life as we know it?” Not necessarily. A diamond is pure carbon, and it may be pretty, but it isn’t alive.  What really sets Earth apart is nitrogen, which makes up 80 percent of the planet’s atmosphere. And it’s there only because there is abundant life on Earth, say scientists at the University of Southern California  The report grew out of a class discussion two years ago in a course taught by Capone and Kenneth Nealson, professor of earth sciences. Students were asked to come up with different ideas about searching for life on other planets. What is a distinct “signature,” as Capone puts it, that would show there is life on another planet?  That’s a question that has been kicked around in many quarters in recent decades, especially since all efforts to find some form of life, no matter whether on Mars or in the distant reaches of space, have failed. At least so far.  The current effort to search for some evidence of life on Mars focuses primarily on the search for water, because it has long been believed that water, or at least some fluid, is necessary for the chemical processes that lead life to take place. But that’s probably the wrong approach, the USC group argues.  “It’s hard to imagine life without water, but it’s easy to imagine water without life,” says Nealson, who was on the Mars team before moving to USC.  But nitrogen would be a much clearer signature of life. Only about 2 percent to 3 percent of the Martian atmosphere is nitrogen. That’s just a trace, and it probably means there is no life on Mars today, and if there was in the past, it probably ended many, many years ago.  But, the USC team adds quickly, that doesn’t mean there’s no life anywhere else in the universe. They don’t know where, of course, but they may have found a way to narrow down the search. Look first for nitrogen, then look for biological activity that should be there.  So if life exists elsewhere, and is similar to life as we know it, there should be nitrogen, and that’s what we should be looking for first, the researchers say.  If they don’t find nitrogen on Mars, Capone says, “that will probably bring us to the conclusion that there likely never was life on Mars.”  But how about elsewhere? Could this technique be used to search for life in other solar systems?  Maybe. It might be possible to detect a nitrogen-rich atmosphere around a planet orbiting another star, but not yet. Current instruments aren’t that sensitive.  If they ever are, the search for life might be narrowed down to the most promising prospects, chiefly because of the presence of nitrogen. And won’t that be fun!  Questions:  1.What can suggest life is possible but cannot be proved according to the author?  2.What is a clear “signature” of life on another planet according to Capone?  3.What is considered as a wrong way to search for evidence of life on Mars?  4.What can probably prove there is no life on Mars today based on the new theory?  5.Why is it impossible to use the new technique to search for life in other solar systems now?

考题 单选题A retail customers application environment requires 32 memory slots and four processors to run scientific, and technical computing, financial, weather simulation, and life sciences. Which of the following System x server meets these needs at minimum cost?()A x3850 X5B x3550 M3C HX5D x3650 M3

考题 单选题Making water rapidly in all holds,all passengers and crew were ordered on deck()and all boats were lowered to rail.A in life jacketsB with life jacketsC with life jackets onD putting on life jackets

考题 单选题47 pays organisent des journées _____.A du patrimoineB d’affaires européennesC de rendez-vous éducatifD de Sciences

考题 问答题Healthcare Reform  During the past two decades, all of the industrialized nations have enacted some form of healthcare reform. America is no exception. Just a few years ago, the U. S. was consumed by a vigorous public debate about healthcare. In the end, the debate reaffirmed that the U. S. would retain its essentially market-based system. Instead of reform imposed from the top down, 3 the American healthcare system underwent some rather profound self-reform, driven by powerful market forces. The market—not the government—managed to wring inflation out of the private healthcare market. 4  Today, it appears that U.S. healthcare costs are again on the rise. At the same time, American patients—like patients elsewhere—are becoming more vocal5 about the restrictions many face in their healthcare plans. Talk of government-led reform is once again in the air. 6  We must think twice, though, before embarking on “reform” if that means imposing further restrictions on our healthcare markets. The more sensible course is to introduce policies that make the market work better—that is, to the advantage of consumers. I base this argument on our company’s decades of experience in healthcare systems around the world, which has given us a unique global perspective on the right and wrong way to reform healthcare. The wrong way is to impose layer after layer of regulation and restrictions. We have seen this approach tried in many countries, and we have always see it fail—fail to hold down costs, and fail to provide the best quality care. Medicine is changing at so rapid a pace that no government agency or expert commission can keep up with it. Only an open, informed and competitive market can do that. This lesson holds true for the U. S., and for all countries contemplating healthcare reform. Free markets do what governments mean to do—but can’t.  The right approach10 is to foster a flexible, market-based system in which consumers have rights, responsibilities, and choices. Healthcare systems do not work if patients are treated as passive recipients of services: 11 they do work if consumers are well-informed about quality, costs, and new treatments, and are free to act responsibly on that knowledge.  Of course, reform should never be driven purely by cost considerations. Instead, we ought to devise new ways of funding healthcare that will make it possible for all patients to afford the best care. Ideally, these new approaches would not only reward individuals and families but also encourage innovation, which can make healthcare systems more efficient, more productive, and ultimately of greater value for patients.  The path we choose will have enormous implications for all of us. We are in a golden age of science, and no field of scientific inquiry holds more promise than that of biomedicine. 13 Not only can we look forward to the discovery of cures for chronic and acute disease, but also to the development of enabling therapies that can help people enjoy more rewarding and productive lives.14 New drugs are already helping people who would once have been disabled by arthritis or cardiovascular disease stay active and mobile.15 More effective anti-depressants and anti-psychotics are beginning to relieve the crippling illness of the mind, allowing sufferers to function normally and happily in society. The promise is quite simply—one of longer, healthier lives. 16  What is at issue are the pace and breadth of discovery, and how quickly we can make the benefits of our knowledge available to the patients who need them.  Therefore, the policy environment the biomedical industry will face in the next century may make or break the next wave of biomedical breakthroughs. 17 Will that environment include protection for intellectual property, freedom for the market to determine price, and support for a robust science base? 18 Will healthcare systems nurture innovation, or remove incentives for discovery? Will they give consumers information and options, or impose stringent rules and regulations that limit access and choice? For the U. S., as for the rest of the world, the healthcare debate is by no means over. And for all of us, the stakes are higher than ever.

考题 单选题By making some very simple changes at home, old people _____.A are free from home accidentsB can improve their healthC are likely to live longerD can live more safely

考题 单选题On a ship,how many ring buoys are required to have a buoyant line attached?()A One ring life buoyB One ring life buoy on each side of the shipC Three ring life buoysD Two ring life buoys on each side of the ship

考题 单选题A healthcare and life sciences client wants to maintain electronic patient records, including medical images, for two years after each patient’s death. How would the IT storage industry describe this business goal?()A Archive solution that requires event-based retentionB Backup solution that provides version-based expirationC Business continuity solution that provides two years Recovery Time Objective (RTO)D Business continuity solution that provides two years Recovery Point Objective (RPO)

考题 问答题Task II (20 marks)  Read the following poem and write an essay in which you discuss its moral and express your personal views.LifeBy Langston HughesLife can be good,Life can be bad,Life is mostly cheerful,But sometimes sad.Life can be dreams,Life can be great thoughts;Life can mean a personSitting in court.Life can be dirty,Life can even be painful;but life is what you make it.So try to make it beautiful.  You should write no less than 160 words. Now write the essay on the Answer Sheet.