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Tracking Down HIV
In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells.
By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died.
In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died.
In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime.
词汇:
spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘
lymph n. 淋巴结
sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤
exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭
immunologist n. 免疫学家
malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病
count n. 计数,计算
infection n. 传染病,感染
breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃
toll n. 代价,死亡人数
intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物
abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况
blood transfusion n. 输血
symptom n. 症状
virologist n. 病毒学家
virus n. 病毒
panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板
hemophiliac n. 血友病患者
vaccine n. 疫苗
注释:
1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用
2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因
3.can be eradicated可以被根除的
练习:
4.The basic pattern used to develop this passage is ____.
A chronological der
B personal narrative
C comparison contrast
D question answer
In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells.
By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died.
In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died.
In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime.
词汇:
spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘
lymph n. 淋巴结
sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤
exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭
immunologist n. 免疫学家
malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病
count n. 计数,计算
infection n. 传染病,感染
breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃
toll n. 代价,死亡人数
intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物
abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况
blood transfusion n. 输血
symptom n. 症状
virologist n. 病毒学家
virus n. 病毒
panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板
hemophiliac n. 血友病患者
vaccine n. 疫苗
注释:
1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用
2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因
3.can be eradicated可以被根除的
练习:
4.The basic pattern used to develop this passage is ____.
A chronological der
B personal narrative
C comparison contrast
D question answer
参考答案
参考解析
解析:4.A 该题为对文章线索总结题,chronological der意思为“按照时间次序”,chronological意思为“时间的”,从该文中的几个时间点来看,人们对于艾滋病的接触、了解、应对、研究,应该是按照不同年份进行的,故答案为选项A。
更多 “Tracking Down HIV In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells. By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died. In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died. In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime. 词汇: spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘 lymph n. 淋巴结 sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤 exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭 immunologist n. 免疫学家 malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病 count n. 计数,计算 infection n. 传染病,感染 breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃 toll n. 代价,死亡人数 intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物 abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况 blood transfusion n. 输血 symptom n. 症状 virologist n. 病毒学家 virus n. 病毒 panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板 hemophiliac n. 血友病患者 vaccine n. 疫苗 注释: 1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用 2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因 3.can be eradicated可以被根除的 练习: 4.The basic pattern used to develop this passage is ____. A chronological der B personal narrative C comparison contrast D question answer” 相关考题
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A Narrative Nurses’ notes contain . ()
A. any change of the patient’s conditionB. a new problem of a patientC. a patient’s responds to a treatmentD. a patient’s responds to your teaching
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The doctor’s advice is that the patient () about his real physical condition.
A.be not toldB.not be toldC.will not be toldD.must not be told
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The doctor had almost lost hope at one point, but the patient finally ___.
A.pulled upB.pulled throughC.pulled overD.pulled out
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It was the first time that the doctor _______ making a mistake concerning the patient.
A. had admittedB. has admittedC. would admitD. admitted
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Passage FiveA warm-hearted nurse on her first day's work came to a patient who had come to London for a visit to the famous doctor. She asked the patient whether there was anything that she could do for him. But he only waved his hand, shook his head and said something she couldn't understand. With a pleasing smile she asked him again and he just kept doing the same and saying the same words, but in about 3 minutes, he closed his eyes. the nurse felt his pulse and found out that the patient had died.The nurse felt so sorry for the poor patient who had ended his llfe very far away from his home that she ran to the doctor in a hurry and repeated to the doctor the sounds she had heard. "My dear girl," said the doctor after listening to what she repeated,"you've just killed him. He was saying, You've been standing on my oxygen pipe."52. The patient had come to London ______.A. to see whether he could make friends with the nurseB. to get the medical treatment from the doctorC. to do some business to make moneyD. to visit the world-famous city
考题
The patient died ______.A. because of the doctorB. because Of the nurseC. because his illness was too badD. because of the wrong medicine he had taken
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What is a convenient and effective system of examining the body of an injury victim?A.Check the corresponding (left versus right) parts of the body.B.Watch the patient's eyes as you probe parts of the body.C.Look for discoloration of the patient's skin.D.Look for uncontrolled vibration or twitching of parts of the body.
考题
Tracking Down HIV
In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells.
By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died.
In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died.
In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime.
词汇:
spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘
lymph n. 淋巴结
sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤
exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭
immunologist n. 免疫学家
malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病
count n. 计数,计算
infection n. 传染病,感染
breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃
toll n. 代价,死亡人数
intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物
abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况
blood transfusion n. 输血
symptom n. 症状
virologist n. 病毒学家
virus n. 病毒
panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板
hemophiliac n. 血友病患者
vaccine n. 疫苗
注释:
1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用
2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因
3.can be eradicated可以被根除的
练习:
3.The final paragraph leads the reader to see that scientists ____.
A have no hope in ever finding a cure fHIV
B have hope that a cure f HIV will befound
C have run out of time to find a cure fHIV
D are in a contest against each other tofind a cure f HIV
考题
共用题干
1.Nursing at Beth Israel Hospital produces the best patient care possible.If we are to solve the nursing shortage(不足),hospital administration and doctors everywhere would do well to follow Beth Israel's example.2.At Beth Israel each patient is assigned to a primary nurse who visits at length with the patient and constructs a full-scale health account that covers everything from his medical history to his emotional state.Then she writes a care plan centered on the patient's illness but which also includes everything else that is necessary.3.The primary nurse stays with the patient through his hospitalization,keeping track with his progress and seeking further advice from his doctor. If a patient at Beth Israel is not responding to treatment,it is not uncommon for his nurse to propose another approach to his doctor. What the doctor at Beth Israel has in the primary nurse is a true colleague.4. Nursing at Beth Israel also involves a decentralized(分散的)nursing administration; every floor,every unit is a self-contained organization.There are nurse-managers instead of head nurses; in addition to their medical duties they do all their own hiring and dismissing,employee advising, and they make salary recommendations.Each unit's nurses decide among themselves who will work what shifts and when.5.Beth Israel's nurse-in-chief ranks as an equal presidents of the hospital. She also is a member of the Medical Executive Committee,which in most hospitals includes only doctors.Follow Beth Israel's example,if we are to solve the________.A:true collegeB:nursing shortageC:head nurseD:doctorE:what shifts and when F: employee
考题
共用题干
1.Nursing at Beth Israel Hospital produces the best patient care possible.If we are to solve the nursing shortage(不足),hospital administration and doctors everywhere would do well to follow Beth Israel's example.2.At Beth Israel each patient is assigned to a primary nurse who visits at length with the patient and constructs a full-scale health account that covers everything from his medical history to his emotional state.Then she writes a care plan centered on the patient's illness but which also includes everything else that is necessary.3.The primary nurse stays with the patient through his hospitalization,keeping track with his progress and seeking further advice from his doctor. If a patient at Beth Israel is not responding to treatment,it is not uncommon for his nurse to propose another approach to his doctor. What the doctor at Beth Israel has in the primary nurse is a true colleague.4. Nursing at Beth Israel also involves a decentralized(分散的)nursing administration; every floor,every unit is a self-contained organization.There are nurse-managers instead of head nurses; in addition to their medical duties they do all their own hiring and dismissing,employee advising, and they make salary recommendations.Each unit's nurses decide among themselves who will work what shifts and when.5.Beth Israel's nurse-in-chief ranks as an equal presidents of the hospital. She also is a member of the Medical Executive Committee,which in most hospitals includes only doctors.Paragraph 4________A:Every patient is assigned to a primary nurse.B:Every patient is assigned to a doctor.C:The features of nursing in Beth Israel.D:The best patient care possible in Beth Israel hospital.E:The cheapest patient care in Beth Israel hospital.F:The duties of primary nurse.
考题
共用题干
1.Nursing at Beth Israel Hospital produces the best patient care possible.If we are to solve the nursing shortage(不足),hospital administration and doctors everywhere would do well to follow Beth Israel's example.2.At Beth Israel each patient is assigned to a primary nurse who visits at length with the patient and constructs a full-scale health account that covers everything from his medical history to his emotional state.Then she writes a care plan centered on the patient's illness but which also includes everything else that is necessary.3.The primary nurse stays with the patient through his hospitalization,keeping track with his progress and seeking further advice from his doctor. If a patient at Beth Israel is not responding to treatment,it is not uncommon for his nurse to propose another approach to his doctor. What the doctor at Beth Israel has in the primary nurse is a true colleague.4. Nursing at Beth Israel also involves a decentralized(分散的)nursing administration; every floor,every unit is a self-contained organization.There are nurse-managers instead of head nurses; in addition to their medical duties they do all their own hiring and dismissing,employee advising, and they make salary recommendations.Each unit's nurses decide among themselves who will work what shifts and when.5.Beth Israel's nurse-in-chief ranks as an equal presidents of the hospital. She also is a member of the Medical Executive Committee,which in most hospitals includes only doctors.What the doctor at Beth Israel has in the primary nurse is a_________.A:true collegeB:nursing shortageC:head nurseD:doctorE:what shifts and when F: employee
考题
Tracking Down HIV
In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells.
By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died.
In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died.
In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime.
词汇:
spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘
lymph n. 淋巴结
sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤
exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭
immunologist n. 免疫学家
malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病
count n. 计数,计算
infection n. 传染病,感染
breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃
toll n. 代价,死亡人数
intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物
abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况
blood transfusion n. 输血
symptom n. 症状
virologist n. 病毒学家
virus n. 病毒
panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板
hemophiliac n. 血友病患者
vaccine n. 疫苗
注释:
1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用
2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因
3.can be eradicated可以被根除的
练习:
2.A T-cell is a ____.
A patient’s blood
B deadly strain of tuberculosis
C white blood cell imptant in providingimmunity to disease
D red blood cell
考题
Tracking Down HIV
In the summer of 1980, a patient had a strange purplish spot removedfrom below his ear. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rarefm of skin cancer. This patient also had lymph node swelling exhaustion.In November 1980, a Los Angeles immunologist examined a young man who haddiseases linked to immune system malfunctions. The doct had a T-cell counttaken of the patient’s blood. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that playsa key role1 in immune responses. The patient had no helper T-cells.
By the end of 1980, 55 Americans were diagnosed with infectionsrelated to immune system breakdown; four had died. A year later the death tollwas 74. Intravenous drug users had T-cell abnmalities. People who hadreceived blood transfusions showed symptoms of immune system breakdown. By July1982, 471 cases of the disease, now called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome(AIDS), had been repted; 184 people had died.
In April 1984, American virologist Dr. Robert Gallo isolated thepathogen, disease producer, responsible f2 AIDS. He called it HTLV-III. InParis, Dr. Luc Montagnier identified a virus he called LAV. An internationalpanel of scientists determined that both men had found the same virus. Itbecame known as Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Blood banks began screeningf HTV in 1985, but by then about 29,000 people had been infected throughblood transfusions. Some 12,000 hemophiliacs had contracted HIV throughblood-clotting products. By 1995, 477,900 Americans had AIDS; 295,500 had died.
In 1996, researchers announced drugs that reduced HIV in infectedpeople. Today scientists are testing vaccines believe that if HIV can besuppressed, then perhaps it can be eradicated3, but it is still a race againsttime.
词汇:
spot n. 地点,斑点,斑块,青春痘
lymph n. 淋巴结
sarcoma n. 肿瘤,肉瘤,恶性毒瘤
exhaustion n. 衰竭,耗尽,精疲力竭
immunologist n. 免疫学家
malfunction n. 故障,失灵,疾病
count n. 计数,计算
infection n. 传染病,感染
breakdown n. 故障,衰弱,崩溃
toll n. 代价,死亡人数
intravenous drug n. 静脉注射药物
abnmalities n. (abnmality的复数形式)畸形,异常情况
blood transfusion n. 输血
symptom n. 症状
virologist n. 病毒学家
virus n. 病毒
panel n. 座谈小组,仪表板
hemophiliac n. 血友病患者
vaccine n. 疫苗
注释:
1.play a key role...扮演一个关键角色,有至关重要的作用
2.be responsible f...对……负责,是……的原因
3.can be eradicated可以被根除的
练习:
5.The wd u eradicated the last paragraph means ____.
A made extreme
B celebrated
C remove by rubbing
D gotten rid of entirely
考题
共用题干
1.Nursing at Beth Israel Hospital produces the best patient care possible.If we are to solve the nursing shortage(不足),hospital administration and doctors everywhere would do well to follow Beth Israel's example.2.At Beth Israel each patient is assigned to a primary nurse who visits at length with the patient and constructs a full-scale health account that covers everything from his medical history to his emotional state.Then she writes a care plan centered on the patient's illness but which also includes everything else that is necessary.3.The primary nurse stays with the patient through his hospitalization,keeping track with his progress and seeking further advice from his doctor. If a patient at Beth Israel is not responding to treatment,it is not uncommon for his nurse to propose another approach to his doctor. What the doctor at Beth Israel has in the primary nurse is a true colleague.4. Nursing at Beth Israel also involves a decentralized(分散的)nursing administration; every floor,every unit is a self-contained organization.There are nurse-managers instead of head nurses; in addition to their medical duties they do all their own hiring and dismissing,employee advising, and they make salary recommendations.Each unit's nurses decide among themselves who will work what shifts and when.5.Beth Israel's nurse-in-chief ranks as an equal presidents of the hospital. She also is a member of the Medical Executive Committee,which in most hospitals includes only doctors.There are nurse managers instead of_________.A:true collegeB:nursing shortageC:head nurseD:doctorE:what shifts and when F: employee
考题
共用题干
First Self-contained Heart ImplantedA patient on the brink of death has received the world's first self-contained artificial heart一a battery- powered device about the size of a softball that runs without the need for wires,tubes or hoses sticking out of the chest.Two surgeons from the University of Louisville implanted the titanium and plastic pump during a seven-hour operation at Jewish Hospital Monday.The hospital said the patient was"awake and responsive" Tuesday and resting comfortably.It refused to release personal details.The patient had been expected to die within a month without the operation,and doctors said they expected the artificial heart to extend the person's life by only a month.But the device is considered a major step toward improving the patient's quality of life.The new pump,called AbioCor,is also a technological leap from the mechanical hearts used in the 1980s,which were attached by wires and tubes to bulky machinery outside the body. The most famous of those,the Jarvic-7,used air as a pumping device and was attached to an apparatus about the size of a washingmachine."I think it's potentially a major step forward in the artificial heart development,"said Dr. David Faxon, president of the American Heart Association.However,he said the dream of an implantable,permanent artificial heart is not yet a reality:"This is obviously an experimental device whose long-term success has to be demonstrated."Only about half of the 4,200 Americans on a waiting list for donor hearts received them last year,and most of the rest died.Some doctors ,including Robert Higgins, chairman of cardiology(心脏病学)at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond,said artificial hearts are unlikely to replace donor hearts."A donor heart in a good transplant can last 15 to 30 years,"he said."It's going to be hard to replace that with a machine."The AbioCor has a 2-pound pumping unit,and electronic controls that adjust the pumping speed based on the body's needs.It is powered by a small battery pack worn outside the body that transmits current through the skin.The patient's life was expected to last several years longer by implanting the artificial heart.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
考题
共用题干
Privacy Worry May Keep HIV Patients From TherapyPatients infected with HIV are often concerned about the confidentiality of their HIV-positive status.In fact,some patients are so worried that they will actually give up treatment to prevent the release of this information,according to a report published in the August issue of AIDS Care.Dr. Kathryn Whetten-Goldstein and colleagues from Duke University,Durham,North Carolina,studied the confidentiality issues of 15 HIV-infected patients from rural North Carolina locations.They were divided into groups designed to explore their attitudes toward,and experiences with,breaches in confidentiality."The fear of a breach in confidentiality is' definitely affecting the care that HIV-infected patients receive,"Whetten-Goldstein said."Most studied patients had experienced or knew someone who had experienced a breach in confidentiality.""Two types of breaches occurred,"Whetten-Goldstein noted."The first was a more obvious type of breach.One example was a nurse who told her child that her patient was HIV-positive out of concern thather child would play with the patient's child.""The other type of breach was more subtle,one that providers might not consider breaches,"Whetten- Goldstein explained."This type of breach involves providers talking about a patient's HIV status without the patient's knowledge of the interaction.""The law allows the sharing of information between providers within the same institution,but patient's consent must be obtained before providers at different institutions can share information,"she pointed out."Patients in the study wanted providers to tell them when they are going to share information with other providers and why it is being done,"Whetten-Goldstein said."They also felt that providers should be punished when a breach occurs.""However,because patients are often reluctant to seek legal action which may further expose their status,they felt that the system should regulate itself,"she added.All patients refuse to receive any treatment because of the possibility to expose their HIV status.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
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Privacy Worry May Keep HIV Patients From TherapyPatients infected with HIV are often concerned about the confidentiality of their HIV-positive status.In fact,some patients are so worried that they will actually give up treatment to prevent the release of this information,according to a report published in the August issue of AIDS Care.Dr. Kathryn Whetten-Goldstein and colleagues from Duke University,Durham,North Carolina,studied the confidentiality issues of 15 HIV-infected patients from rural North Carolina locations.They were divided into groups designed to explore their attitudes toward,and experiences with,breaches in confidentiality."The fear of a breach in confidentiality is' definitely affecting the care that HIV-infected patients receive,"Whetten-Goldstein said."Most studied patients had experienced or knew someone who had experienced a breach in confidentiality.""Two types of breaches occurred,"Whetten-Goldstein noted."The first was a more obvious type of breach.One example was a nurse who told her child that her patient was HIV-positive out of concern thather child would play with the patient's child.""The other type of breach was more subtle,one that providers might not consider breaches,"Whetten- Goldstein explained."This type of breach involves providers talking about a patient's HIV status without the patient's knowledge of the interaction.""The law allows the sharing of information between providers within the same institution,but patient's consent must be obtained before providers at different institutions can share information,"she pointed out."Patients in the study wanted providers to tell them when they are going to share information with other providers and why it is being done,"Whetten-Goldstein said."They also felt that providers should be punished when a breach occurs.""However,because patients are often reluctant to seek legal action which may further expose their status,they felt that the system should regulate itself,"she added.Whether a HIV-infected patient agrees to other(not his)medical workers'sharing the information about his HIV status is one of the rights given by the constitution.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
考题
共用题干
Privacy Worry May Keep HIV Patients From TherapyPatients infected with HIV are often concerned about the confidentiality of their HIV-positive status.In fact,some patients are so worried that they will actually give up treatment to prevent the release of this information,according to a report published in the August issue of AIDS Care.Dr. Kathryn Whetten-Goldstein and colleagues from Duke University,Durham,North Carolina,studied the confidentiality issues of 15 HIV-infected patients from rural North Carolina locations.They were divided into groups designed to explore their attitudes toward,and experiences with,breaches in confidentiality."The fear of a breach in confidentiality is' definitely affecting the care that HIV-infected patients receive,"Whetten-Goldstein said."Most studied patients had experienced or knew someone who had experienced a breach in confidentiality.""Two types of breaches occurred,"Whetten-Goldstein noted."The first was a more obvious type of breach.One example was a nurse who told her child that her patient was HIV-positive out of concern thather child would play with the patient's child.""The other type of breach was more subtle,one that providers might not consider breaches,"Whetten- Goldstein explained."This type of breach involves providers talking about a patient's HIV status without the patient's knowledge of the interaction.""The law allows the sharing of information between providers within the same institution,but patient's consent must be obtained before providers at different institutions can share information,"she pointed out."Patients in the study wanted providers to tell them when they are going to share information with other providers and why it is being done,"Whetten-Goldstein said."They also felt that providers should be punished when a breach occurs.""However,because patients are often reluctant to seek legal action which may further expose their status,they felt that the system should regulate itself,"she added.Breaches in confidentiality are common in medical circles all over the world.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
考题
共用题干
Privacy Worry May Keep HIV Patients From TherapyPatients infected with HIV are often concerned about the confidentiality of their HIV-positive status.In fact,some patients are so worried that they will actually give up treatment to prevent the release of this information,according to a report published in the August issue of AIDS Care.Dr. Kathryn Whetten-Goldstein and colleagues from Duke University,Durham,North Carolina,studied the confidentiality issues of 15 HIV-infected patients from rural North Carolina locations.They were divided into groups designed to explore their attitudes toward,and experiences with,breaches in confidentiality."The fear of a breach in confidentiality is' definitely affecting the care that HIV-infected patients receive,"Whetten-Goldstein said."Most studied patients had experienced or knew someone who had experienced a breach in confidentiality.""Two types of breaches occurred,"Whetten-Goldstein noted."The first was a more obvious type of breach.One example was a nurse who told her child that her patient was HIV-positive out of concern thather child would play with the patient's child.""The other type of breach was more subtle,one that providers might not consider breaches,"Whetten- Goldstein explained."This type of breach involves providers talking about a patient's HIV status without the patient's knowledge of the interaction.""The law allows the sharing of information between providers within the same institution,but patient's consent must be obtained before providers at different institutions can share information,"she pointed out."Patients in the study wanted providers to tell them when they are going to share information with other providers and why it is being done,"Whetten-Goldstein said."They also felt that providers should be punished when a breach occurs.""However,because patients are often reluctant to seek legal action which may further expose their status,they felt that the system should regulate itself,"she added.Quite a few patients will firmly defend their own right if such a breach occurs.A:RightB:WrongC:Not mentioned
考题
Jimmy couldn‘t write down Mr.Baker’s name because________.A.he had no pen or paper
B.he couldn‘t read or write
C.he had to look after the baby
D.he had to play with his brother
考题
单选题The rescuer can best provide an airtight seal during mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by pinching the victim’s nostrils and().A
cupping a hand around the patient's mouthB
keeping the head elevatedC
applying his mouth tightly over the victim's mouthD
holding the jaw down firmly
考题
单选题The “singer” treats the patient by ______.A
rubbing the patient’s body with sand from a sand painting figureB
destroying the sand painting figure of a supernatural beingC
transferring his supernatural power to the patientD
applying a magic substance to the patient’s body
考题
单选题He served the army in ______ when he was in_______.A
1980’s; his twentiesB
1980’s; the twentiesC
the 1980’s; his twentiesD
the 1980’s; the twenties
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