首页
登录
职称英语
Instinctively, the first thing we want to know about a disease is whether it
Instinctively, the first thing we want to know about a disease is whether it
游客
2023-07-07
42
管理
问题
Instinctively, the first thing we want to know about a disease is whether it is going to kill us. Twenty-five years ago, this was the only question about AIDS we could answer with any certainty; now, it is the only question we really cannot answer well at all.
By now, those of us in the AIDS business long term have cared for thousands of patients. No one with that kind of personal experience can doubt for a moment the deadly potential of H. I. V. or the life-saving capabilities of the drugs developed against it. But there are also now hundreds of footnotes and exceptions and modifications to those two facts that make the big picture ever murkier(扑朔迷离).
We have patients scattered at every possible point: men and women who cruise on their medications with no problems at all, and those who never become stable on them and die of AIDS; those who refuse them until it is too late, and those who never need them at all; those who leave AIDS far behind only to die from lung cancer or breast cancer or liver failure, and those few who are killed by the medications themselves.
So, when we welcome a new patient into our world, one whose fated place in this world is still unclear, and that patient asks us, as most do, whether this illness is going to kill him or not, it often takes a bit of mental stammering(口吃)before we hazard an answer.
Now, a complete rundown of all the news from the front would take hours. The statistics change almost hourly as new treatments appear. It is all too cold, too mathematical, too scary to dump on the head of a sick, frightened person. So we simplify. " We have good treatments now," we say. " You should do fine. "
Once, not so long ago, we were working in another universe. Now we have simply rejoined the carnival(嘉年华)of modern medicine, noisy and encouraging, confusing and contradictory, fueled by the eternal balancing of benefits and risks.
You can win big, and why shouldn’t you, with the usual fail-safe combination of luck and money. You have our very best hopes, so step right up: we sell big miracles but, offer no guarantees. [br] What do we know about the AIDS patients the author has cared for?
选项
A、All of them need the help of medications.
B、Some of them die of refusing medications.
C、All of them die of AIDS eventually.
D、Some of them are killed by the fear of AIDS.
答案
B
解析
事实细节题。本题考查有关作者曾经照料过的病人的细节。该题可以使用排除法。A)“他们都需要药物的帮助”与原文意思不符,定位段提到,有些人根本不需要药物治疗,故排除;B)“他们中的有些人死于不愿接受药物治疗”符合原文意思,原文提到,到了不可救药的地步才肯服药的人,故为答案;C)“他们最终都会死于艾滋病”与原文意思不符,原文提到,有些人早巳摆脱艾滋病,但到头来却死于肺癌等,故排除;D)“他们中的有些人死于对艾滋病的恐惧”原文未提及,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/2815733.html
相关试题推荐
Scientistssaythatsomediseases,suchascancer,______(和吸烟过多有关).arerelatedt
WanttoKnowYourDiseaseRisk?CheckYourExposomeA)Whenitcom
WanttoKnowYourDiseaseRisk?CheckYourExposomeA)Whenitcom
WanttoKnowYourDiseaseRisk?CheckYourExposomeA)Whenitcom
WanttoKnowYourDiseaseRisk?CheckYourExposomeA)Whenitcom
WanttoKnowYourDiseaseRisk?CheckYourExposomeA)Whenitcom
Somediseasesareinfectious—likecolds,flu,andchickenpox(水痘).Butwhat
Somediseasesareinfectious—likecolds,flu,andchickenpox(水痘).Butwhat
Somediseasesareinfectious—likecolds,flu,andchickenpox(水痘).Butwhat
Somediseasesareinfectious—likecolds,flu,andchickenpox(水痘).Butwhat
随机试题
Adexecshavelongreliedontruckloadsofcoffeetostoketheircreativity.
WhatdidHelenrecentlypass?[originaltext]M:Hi,Helen.Howdidyourdrivingt
PeopleworldwidecelebrateNewYearindifferentways.InLatinAmerica,peo
下列物质的吸收不受植酸、磷酸的影响的是( )。A.血红素铁 B.硫酸铁 C
根据WHO精子活动度的规定,精子在原地打转应为A.a级 B.b级 C.c级
某企业将某项资产与国外企业合资,要求对资产进行评估。具体资料如下:该资产账面原值
()是风险监管的第一步,与现场检查、非现场检查和市场退出共同构成风险监管的完
重组DNA技术中常用的工具酶下列哪项不是()A.限制性核酸内切酶 B.
毛果芸香碱不具有的药理作用是A、胃肠道平滑肌收缩 B、腺体分泌增加 C、心率
潜在客户做出房屋交易决策一般要考虑的因素包括( )。A、房地产经纪机构的宣传
最新回复
(
0
)