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Hospital doctors don’t go out very often as their work__________ aU their time.A.takes aw

Hospital doctors don’t go out very often as their work__________ aU their time.

A.takes away

B.takes in

C.takes over

D.takes up

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更多“Hospital doctors don’t go out …”相关的问题
第1题
Hospital doctors don' t go out very often as their work ______ all their time.A.takes away

Hospital doctors don' t go out very often as their work ______ all their time.

A.takes away

B.takes in

C.takes over

D.takes up

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第2题
In that country, hospital doctors don't go sightseeing very often because their work _____
_ almost all their time.

A.takes down

B.takes up

C.takes apart

D.takes over

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第3题
After reading the story what can we infer about the hospital?A.h is a children’s hospital

After reading the story what can we infer about the hospital?

A.h is a children’s hospital.

B.It has strict rules about visiting hour.

C.The conditions there aren’t very good.

D.The nurses and doctors there don’t work hard.

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第4题
根据以下资料,回答下列各题: Years ago,Charlie,a highly respected orthopedist and a mento
r of mine,found a lump in his stomach.He had a surgeon explore the area,and the diagnosis was pancreatic cancer. He went home the next day,closed his practice,and never set foot in a hospital again.He focused on spending time with family and feeling as good as possible.Several months later,he died at home.He got no chemotherapy,radiation,or surgical treatment.Medicare didn’tspend much on him. It’s not a frequent topic of discussion,but doctors die,t00.And they don’t die like the rest of us.What’s unusual about them is not how much treatment they get compared to most Americans,but how little.Of course,doctors don’t want to die;they want to live.But they know enough about modern medicine to know its limits.Almost all medical professionals have seen what we call“futile care”being performed on people.That’s when doctors bring the cutting edge of technology to bear on a grievously ill person near the end of life.The patient will get cut open,perforated with tubes,hooked up to machines,and assaulted with drugs.I cannot count the number of times fellow physicians have told me,in words that vary only slightly.“Promise me if you find me like this that you’ll kill me.” How has it come to this—that doctors administer so much care that they wouldn’t want for themselves?The simple,or not—s0—simple,answer is this:patients,doctors,and the system. To see how patients play a role,imagine a scenario in which someone has lost consciousness and been admitted to an emergency room,and shocked and scared family members find themselves caught up in a maze of choices.When doctors ask if they want“everything”done.they answer yes.Then the nightmare begins.Feeding into the problemare unrealistic expectations of what doctors can accomplish.For example,many people think of CPR as a reliable lifesaver when,in fact,the results are usually poor. But of course it’s not just patients making these things happen.Doctors play an enabling role,too.The trouble is that even doctors who hate to administer futile care must find a way to address the wishes of patients and families.Imagine,once again,the emergency room with those grieving family members.They do not know the doctor.Establishing trust and confidence under such circumstances is a very delicate thing.People are prepared to think the doctor is acting out of base motives,trying to save time,or money,or effort,especially if the doctor is advising against further treatment. It's easy to find fault with both doctors and patients in such stories,but in many ways all the parties are simply victims of a larger system that encourages excessive treatment.In some unfortunate cases,doctors use the fee.for-service model to do everything they can,no matter how pointless.to make money.More commonly,though,doctors are fearful of litigation and do whatever they’re asked to avoid geeing in trouble. The real problem the author is concerned about in this article is________.

A.the overtreatment for dying patients

B.the different attitude of doctor and patients toward death

C.the disproportionately high medicare expenditure in America

D.the unequal and non.transparent doctor—patient relationship

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第5题
??BWe walked in 80 quietly that the nurse at the desk didn&39;t even lift her eves from th

??B

We walked in 80 quietly that the nurse at the desk didn&39;t even lift her eves from the book. Mum pointed at a big chair by the door and I knew she wanted to sit down.While l watched mouth open in surprise, mum took off her hat and coat and gave them to me to hold. She walked quietly to the room by the lift and took out a wet mop.She pushed the mop past the desk and as the nurse looked up,mum nodded and said,“Very dirty floor.”

“Yes,I&39;m glad they finally decided to clean them,”the nurse answered. She looked at mum and said,“But aren’t you working late?”

Mum just pushed harder,each swipe(拖一下)of the mop taking her farther and farther down the hall. I watched until she was out of sight and the nurse had turned back to writing in the big book.

After a long time mum came back. Her eyes were shining. She quickly put the mop back and took my hand. As we tun led to go out of the door, mum bowed politely to the nurse and said“Thank you.”

Outside,mum told me,“Dagmar is fine.No fever(发热).”

“You saw her,mum?”

“Of course. I told her about the hospital rules, and she will not expect us until tomorrow. Dad will stop worrying as well. It&39;s a fine hospital,but such floors!A mop is no good. You need ft. brush.”

When she took a mop from the small room,what mum really wanted to do was________

??A.to clean the floor

B.to please the nurse

C.to see a patient

D.to surprise the story-teller

After reading the story what can we infer about the hospital?A.h is a children’s hospital.

B.It has strict rules about visiting hour.

C.The conditions there aren’t very good.

D.The nurses and doctors there don’t work hard.

When the nurse talked to mum she thought mum was a________.A.nurse

B.visitor

C.patient

D.cleaner

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第6题
The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.A) articulate B) anticipa

The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.

A) articulate

B) anticipate

C) manifest

D) monitor

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第7题
Everybody may have seen the film "Death on the Nile (尼罗河) ," but nobody can imagine tha

Everybody may have seen the film "Death on the Nile (尼罗河) ," but nobody can imagine that the writer of the story, Agatha Christie, saved a baby in a most unusual way.

In June 1977, a baby girl became seriously ill in Deleville. Doctors there were unable to find out the cause of her illness, so she was sent to a famous hospital in London, where there were many excellent doctors. The baby was so seriously iii that a team of doctors hurried to examine her without any delay. The doctors, too, were puzzled by the baby's illness, and they also became discouraged. Just then a nurse asked to speak to them.

"I think the baby is suffering from thallium (铊) poisoning," said the nurse~ "A few days ago, I read a story 'A Pale Horse' written by Agatha Christie. Someone uses thallium poison, and all the symptoms (症状) are written in the book. They are exactly the same as the baby's."

"You're very good at observing things, "said a doctor, "and you may be right. We'll carry out some tests and find out whether the cause is thallium poisoning or not."

The tests proved that the baby had indeed been poisoned by thallium. Once they knew that cause, the doctors were able to give her correct treatment. The baby soon got well and was sent back to Deleville. A week later it was reported that the poison might have come from an insecticide (杀虫剂) used in Deleville.

The baby was sent to a hospital in London because ______.

A.her parents were living in London then

B.the hospitals in Deleville were full at that time

C.she was the daughter of a famous doctor in London

D.doctors in Deleville were not sure about the cause of her illness

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第8题
Mrs .Jackson is an American doctor .She is now in China .She works in a children' s hospital in Chongqing .She is also learning Chinese medicine there .She likes Chinese medicine very much .She loves to work for children .She works hard in the day and reads English books on Chinese medicine at night .She learns Chinese from the Chinese doctors and her Chinese friends .Now she can speak some Chinese .She can read some Chinese ,too.

Her husband , Mr.Jackson , is a teacher .He teaches English in a middle school in Chongqing .He works hard ,too.He works from Monday to Friday .He teaches three classes every day .he wants to make more money .

1.The Jacksons are from England .

2.Mrs .Jackson works in a children' s hospital in Shanghai .

3.Mrs . Jackson is learning Chinese now .

4.Mr.Jackson is an English teacher

5.Mr.Jackson doesn' t work hard .

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第9题
The United States has more than one hundred twenty medical colleges. The American Ass
ociation of Medical Colleges says these schools have about seventy thousand students.

How hard is it to get into one of the top medical schools, like for example the one at Yale University in Connecticut? Last year almost three thousand seven hundred students hoped to get accepted there. Only one hundred seventy-six -- or less than five percent -- were admitted.

People who want to become medical doctors often study large amounts of biology, chemistry and other science. Some students work for a year or two in a medical or research job before they try to get accepted to medical school.

Medical students spend their first two years in classroom study. They learn about the body and all of its systems. And they begin studying diseases -- how to recognize and treat them. By the third year, students guided by experienced doctors begin working with patients in hospitals. As the students watch and learn, they think about the kind of medicine they would like to practice as doctors. During the fourth year, students begin applying to hospital programs for the additional training they will need after medical school. Competition for a residency at a top hospital can be fierce.

A medical education can be very costly, especially at a private school. One year at a private medical college can cost forty thousand dollars or more. The average at a public medical school is more than fifteen thousand dollars. Most students have to take out loans to pay for medical school. Many finish their education heavily in debt.

Doctors are among the highest paid professionals in the United States. Specialists in big cities are generally the highest paid. But there are also doctors who earn considerably less, including those in poor communities.

(1)Which of the following ideas is NOT suggested in the passage?

A、It is hard to get into one of the top medical schools.

B、The United States has more than one hundred twenty medical colleges.

C、Medical students need two years' classroom study.

D、After graduating from medical schools, the students become doctors.

(2)How many years the medical students take to graduate from medical school?

A、2

B、3

C、4

D、1

(3)In what way many medical students pay for their medical education?

A、Have part-time jobs in hospitals.

B、Take out loans.

C、Their parents pay for it.

D、Work hard for the scholarship.

(4)What the medical students begin to do in their fourth year of study?

A、Looking for a job.

B、Working with patients in hospitals

C、Applying to hospital programs for the additional training.

D、Learning about the body and all of its systems

(5)_______ are generally the highest paid.

A、Specialists in big cities.

B、Experienced doctors.

C、Doctors in poor communities

D、Doctors who graduated from private medical schools.

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第10题
Signs barring cell-phone use are a familiar sight to anyone who has ever sat in a hospital
waiting room. But the_____(1)popularity of electronic medical records has forced hospital-based doctors to become_____(2)on computers throughout the day, and desktops-which keep doctors from besides-are_____(3)giving way to wireless devices.

As clerical loads increased, "something had to_____(4), and that was always face time with patients," says Dr.Bhakti Patel, a former chief resident in the University of Chicago&39;s internal-medicine program. In fall 2010, she helped_____(5)a pilot project in Chicago to see if the iPad could improve working conditions and patient care. The experiment was so_____(6)that all internal-medicine program adopted the same_____(7)in 2011. Medical schools at Yale and Stanford now have paperless, iPad-based curriculums. "You&39;ll want an iPad just so you can wear this" is the slogan for one of the new lab coats_____(8)with large pockets to accommodate tablet computers.

A study of the University of Chicago iPad project found that patients got tests and_____(9) faster if they were cared for by iPad-equipped residents.Many patients also_____(10) a better understanding of the illnesses that landed them in the hospital in the first place.

A.dependent

B.designed

C.fast

D.flying

E.gained

F.give

G.growing

H.launch

I.policy

J.prospect

K.rather

L.reliable

M.signal

N.successful

O.treatments

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