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职称英语考试2004年卫生类A级考试试题

2008-04-07来源:

    A  it would make him look old.
    B  It would make him nervous.
    C  it was too expensive.    ’
    D  it was old—styled.
32 Which of the following is NOT true of Crystal Ear?
  A  It is highly sensitive.
  B  It is powerful.
  C  It is invisible.
  D  It is wireless.
33 One special feature of Crystal Ear is that
  A  you can control its volume.
  B you needn’t take it off everyday.
  C  it is solar-powered.
D  it saves power.
34 According to the passage,hearing loss is
  A  only a minor health problem.
  B the world’s most common health problem
  C  merely,a teenage disease.
  D  an incurable disease.
35 Many people leave their hearing problem untreated.because
    A  it is not serious.
    B  Crystal Ear is not yet available.
    C  it is not easy to have it treated.
    D they don’t want to look old.
第二篇
New U.S.Plan for Disease Prevention
  Urging Americans to take responsibility for their health,Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson on Tuesday launched a$1 5 million program to try to encourage
communities to do more to prevent chronic diseases like heart disease,cancer and diabetes (糖尿病)。
    The initiative highlights the COSTS of chronic diseases—the leading causes of death in the
United States--and outlines ways that people can prevent them,including better diet and
increased exercise.
    “In the United States today,7 of 1 0 deaths and the vast majority of serious illness,disability
and health care costs are caused by chronic diseases,”the Health and Human Services
department said in a statement.
    The causes are often behavioral--smoking,poor eating habits and a lack of exercise.
    “I am convinced that preventing disease by promoting better health is a smart policy choice
for our future.”Thompson told a conference held to launch the initiative.
    ‘‘Our current health care system is not structured to deal with the rising costs of treating
diseases that are largely preventable through changes in our lifestyle choices.”
    Thompson said heart disease and strokes will cost the country more than$35 1 billion in
2003.
    “These leading causes of death for men and women are largely preventable,yet we as a
nation are not taking the steps necessary for US to lead healthier, longer lives,”he said.
    The$1 5 million is designed to go to communities to promote prevention,pushing for
changes as simple as building sidewalks to encourage people to walk more.
    Daily exercise such as walking can prevent and even reverse heart disease and diabetes,and
prevent cancer and strokes.
    The money will also go to community organizations,clinics and nutritionists who are being
 encouraged to work together to educate people at risk of diabetes about what they card do to
 prevent it and encourage more cancer screening.
    The American Cancer Society estimates that half of all cancers Can be caught by screening,
including Pap tests(巴氏试验)for cervical(子宫颈的)cancer mammograms(乳房X线照片)
for breast cancer, colonoscopies (结肠镜检查),and prostate(前列腺的)checks.
  If such cancers were all caught by early screening,the group estimates that the survival rate
for cancer would rise to 95 percent.
36 Which of the following is NOT true of chronic diseases in the US?
  A They account for 70%of all deaths.
  B They are responsible for most of the health care costs.
  C They often result in unhealthy lifestyles.
  D They are largely preventable.
37 The author mentions all the following ways of disease prevention EXCEPT
    A  better diet.
    B  increased exercise.
    C less smoking.
    D  more frequent hand washing.
38 The passage indicates that spending more money on disease prevention will mean
  A  greater responsibility of the government.
  B less need for input、into treatment.
  C higher costs of health care.
  D  more lifestyle choices for people.   
39 The purpose of the,S15 million program is to
  A promote disease prevention.
  B  build more highways.
  C  help poor communities.
  D  wipe out chronic diseases.
40 Early cancer screening Can help reduce significantly
    A the death rates for a11 chronic diseases.
    B the kinds of cancer attacking people.
    C the incidence rate for cancer.
    D the death rate for cancer.    ”
第三篇The Body Thieves
    In the early nineteenth century in Britain,many improvements were being made in the
world of medicine.Doctors and Surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable about the human
body.Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now curable.However, Surgeons had
one problem.They needed dead bodies to cut up,or dissect(解剖).This was the only way that
they could learn about the flesh and bones inside the body。and the only way to teach new
surgeons to carry out operations.    、
    The job of finding these dead bodies was carried out by an unpleasant group of people
called“body snatchers'’.They went into graveyards(墓地)at night and,using wooden shovels
to make less noise。dug up any recently buried bodies.Then they took the bodies to the medical
schools and sold them.A body could be sold for between£5 and~10,which was a lot of money
at that time.The doctors who paid the body snatchers had all agreement with t}them—they never
asked any questions.They did not desire to know where the bodies came from,as long as they
kept arriving.  
  The most famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William
Burke and William Hare.Burke and Hare were different because they did not just dig Up bodies
from graveyards.They got greedy and thought of all easier way to find bodies.Instead of
digging them up,they killed the poorer guests in Hare’s small hotel.Dr.Knox,the respected
surgeon they worked for, never asked why all the bodies they brought him had been strangled
(勒死).    一
  For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because,unsurprisingly, the bodies of their
victims were never found by the police.They were eventually arrested and put on trial in 1 829.
The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was released but Burke Was found guilty and his
punishment was to be hanged.Appropriately, his body Was given to the medical school and he
ended up on the dissecting table,just like his victims.In one small way,.justice was done.
  Now,over 150 years later, surgeons do not need the help of criminals to learn their skills.
However,the science of surgery could not have developed without their rather gruesome(令人
毛骨悚然的) help.
41 The problem facing British surgeons in the early 19thcenturywasthat
    A  some illnesses remained incurable.
    B  few people were willing to work as surgeons.
    C medical expenses were too high.
    D dead bodies were not easily available.
42 The body snatchers used wooden shovels because
  A they did not wish to spoil the dead bodies.
  B they wanted to keep the bodies to themselves
  C they were afraid of being caught.
  D they were careful not to disturb anyone.
43 Burk and Hare differed from other body snatchers in that
  A they got other people to dig up bodies for them.
  B they sold the bodies only to one surgeon.
  C they dug up bodies not just from graveyards.
  D they resorted to murder to get bodies.
44 The bodies of Burke’s and Hare’s victims couldn’t be found by the police because
  A they had been stolen.
  B they had been strangled.
  C they had been dissected.
  D they had been buried.
45 The body thieves contributed in their gruesome way to
   A  medical advancement.
B,legal progress.
C  social stability.
D  material wealth.
第5部分:补全短文  (第46~50题,每题2分,共10分)
    阅读下面的短文,文章中有5处空白,文章后面有6组文字,请根据文章的内容选择
5组文字,将其分别放回文章原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位
置上。
The Dangers of Secondhand Smoke
  Most people know that cigarette smoking is harmful to their health.Scientific research
shows that it causes many kinds of diseases.In fact,many people who smoke get lung cancel
However, Edward Gilson has lung cancer, and he has never smoked cigarettes.He lives with his
wife,Evelyn,who has smoked about a pack of cigarettes a day throughout their marriage.
             (46)
  No one knows for sure why Mr.Gilson has lung cancer.Nevertheless,doctors believe that
secondhand smoke may cause lung cancer in people who do not smoke because nonsmokers
often breathe in the smoke. from other people’s cigarettes.          (47)The US
Environmental Protection Agency reports that about 53,000 people die in the United States each
year as a result of exposure to secondhand smoke.
  The smoke that comes from a lit cigarette contains many different poisonous chemicals.In
the past.scientists did not也ink that these chemicals could harm a nonsmoker’s health.
             (48)They discovered that even nonsmokers had unhealthy amounts of these toxic
(有毒的)chemicals in their bodies.As a matter of fact,almost all of US breathe tobacco smoke at