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[主观题]

Nearly all surgical students stick themselves with needles and【C1】______ instruments while

in training. But【C2】______ fail to report the injuries,【C3】______ their health and that of their families and patients to the threat of 【C4】______ diseases, according to a my by Dr. Makary and colleagues being published today. Their being【C5】______ was the chief reason the surgical residents【C6】______ for the injuries, which were mostly【C7】______ .

The survey revealed that young surgeons didn't report the potentially fatal injuries for a range of reasons. 【C8】______ a time surgeons feel that doing so would take too much time, could【C9】______ career opportunities and might cause a loss of face among【C10】______. In addition, there was a【C11】______ belief that getting even timely medical attention would not prevent infection.

"It's been long【C12】______ , but no one truly appreciated the【C13】______ of the problem," said Martin Makary. "Every surgeon is【C14】______ to be on anti-HIV medications and is at risk for contracting HIV and hepatitis at far Ngher rates than we suspected."

"Part of the surgical culture has been maintaining the patient first at all cast, and when an accident occurs in the operating recto, the surgeon's【C15】______ inclination is to continue with the operation," he said. "But the extent of the problem is much greater than we thought. Previous estimates of injuries understate the seriousness of the problem,【C16】______ most of the injuries are not being recorded."

"More hospitals need to do a better job in protection", Makary said. "They need more appropriate and more tinny surgical systems【C17】______ surgeons can get medical treatment immediately, not after a long【C18】______ process that takes them away from the patient." The findings【C19】 ______ the need for "immediate steps to improve safety and care for health care workers to reduce the spread of HIV and hepatitis infection," he said . The hospitals could【C20】______ so-called "sharpless" technologies where possible, including electric scalpels, clips and glues.

【C1】

A.medical

B.acute

C.surgical

D.sharp

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更多“Nearly all surgical students stick themselves with needles and【C1】______ instruments while”相关的问题

第1题

In the experiment described in Paragraph 2, the video-watchers experienced downturn in the
antibody because ______.

A.the video was not enjoyable at all

B.the outcome was beyond their control

C.the knew little about surgical procedures

D.they felt no pressure while watching the video

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第2题

Robotic SurgeryStuart Forbes celebrated his 60th birthday on April 11. A week later, he wa

Robotic Surgery

Stuart Forbes celebrated his 60th birthday on April 11. A week later, he was diagnosed with prostate (前列腺) cancer. "It was quite a month," says Forbes, a blunt Vietnam veteran who runs a consulting firm outside Boston. When biopsies confirmed he had an aggressive form. of the disease, Forbes started looking for a surgeon. The first recommended a traditional radical prostatectomy (前列腺切除术), which would require an eight-to-10 inch incision and at 1east two days in the hospital Forbes was also warned that he would likely lose almost all the nerves on the left side of the prostate, which could permanently affect his sexual function. "I thought, 'I need to really look at all my options' ," says Forbes. He considered high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation (切除), a relatively new technology that's been used in Europe. But it's expensive and would require transatlantic trips. He looked into various forms of radiation, as well as proton-beam therapy. Then, in June, his girlfriend took him to a symposium on robotic surgery. "I saw the machine and how it worked," remembers Forbes. "It was just incredible. I said, 'That's it'."

In August, Dr. Ashutosh Tewari, director of robotic prostatectomy at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Well Cornell, removed Forbes's walnut-size prostate and lymph nodes and reattached his bladder to his urethra (尿道)without once putting his hands inside the patient. Using Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci robotic system and operating through five tiny incisions, Tewari conducted the entire procedure from across the room. He sat at a console and turned two knobs to remotely manipulate tiny surgical instruments attached to adjustable robotic arms. Forbes was walking within hours of his surgery and was discharged the next day. He compares the discomfort from the largest incision (about two inches long, and the only one to require stitches) to a bad pimple. By midweek he was walking three miles daily. In 10 days he was back at work. After three weeks he was playing golf again; by late October he'd regained normal urinary, and most sexual function. "I'm about as excited as anyone can be about this procedure," he says.

Using robots to perform. surgery once seemed a futuristic fantasy. Not anymore. An estimated 36 600 robotic procedures will be performed this year-- from heart-bypass surgeries to kidney transplants to hysterectomies (子宫切除术). That's up nearly 50 percent from last year, and analysts predict the figure will nearly double in 2006 to more than 70 000 procedures. Since the da Vinci was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in July 2000 (the only robotic system to get the FDA nod), about 350 of the units have been purchased, including 30 in the last quarter alone, at about $1.3 million a piece. Surgeons who use the system have found that patients have less blood loss and pain, lower risk of complications, shorter hospital stays and quicker recovery times than those who have open surgery.

The robotic system has already transformed the field of prostate surgery, for which it was approved in May 2001. That year it was used in less than 1 percent of all prostatectomies. This year more than 20 percent will be done with the robot. And that figure is expected to double next year. "It's becoming the standard of care for prostatectomies," says Dr. Santiago Horgan, director of minimally invasive and robotic surgery at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC).

The first major study to compare open and robotic prostatectomies was published in the British Journal of Urology in 2003 by Dr. Mani Menon, head of the Vattikuti Urology Institute at Detroit's Henry Ford Hospital. (The hospital has now done about 2 050 of the robotic procedures --more than any other in the nation. ) The study of 300 patients found that those who had open surgery lost five times as much blood, had four times the risk of complications and remained in the h

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第3题

Nearly all the kids ________ to get injection.

A.feel quite happy

B.dislike

C.would like

D.are eager

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第4题

Nearly all the families can manage to meet the soaring tuition costs through various inves
tment plans.

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第5题

You look worn out. You’ve been standing ()all the evening.

A.hardly

B.nearly

C.scarcely

D.barely

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第6题

According to the UN's prediction, the growth population from now to 2050 is nearly all in
______.

A.western countries

B.African countries

C.developed countries

D.developing countries

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第7题

听力原文:W: You've been doing weather reports for nearly 30 years. Has the weather got any
worse in all these years?

M: Well, not necessarily worse. But we are seeing more swings.

Q: What does the man say about the weather?

(16)

A.It's worse than 30 years ago.

B.It remains almost the same as before.

C.There are more extremes in the weather.

D.There has been a significant rise in temperature.

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第8题

Parents speak loud in teacher selection in their child's early learning because______.A.it

Parents speak loud in teacher selection in their child's early learning because______.

A.it is torturing to wait for news of classroom assignments

B.they consider it great to be a teacher in basic education

C.they are used to directing nearly all aspects of their child

D.it is custom to meet and argue with the school principle

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第9题

It is said that in England death is pressing, in Canada inevitable and in California optio
nal. Small wonder. Americans' life expectancy has nearly doubled over the past century. Failing hips can be replaced, clinical depression controlled, cataracts removed in a 30-minute surgical procedure. Such advances offer the aging population a quality of life that was unimaginable when I entered medicine 50 years ago. But not even a great health-care system can cure death, and our failure to confront that reality now threatens this greatness of ours. Death is normal; we are genetically programmed to disintegrate and perish, even under ideal conditions. We all understand that at some level, yet as medical consumers we treat death as a problem to be solved. Shielded by third-party payers from the cost of our care, we demand everything that can possibly be done for us, even if it's useless. The most obvious example is late stage cancer care. Physicians-- frustrated by their inability to cure the disease and fearing loss of hope in the patient-- too often offer aggressive treatment far beyond what is scientifically justified.

In 1950, the US spent $12.7 billion on health care. In 2002, the cost will be$1 540 billion. Anyone can see this trend is unsustainable. Yet few seem willing to try to reverse it. Some scholars conclude that a government with finite resources should simply stop paying for medical care that sustains life beyond a certain age —say 83 or so. Former Colorado governor Richard Lamm has been quoted as saying that the old and infirm "have a duty to die and get out of the way" so that younger, healthier people can realize their potential.

I Would not go that far. Energetic people now routinely work through their 60s and beyond, and remain dazzlingly productive. At 78, Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone jokingly claims to be 53. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor is in her 70s, and former surgeon general C. Everett Koop chairs an Internet start-up in his 80s. These leaders are living proof that prevention works and that we can manage the health problems that come naturally with age. As a mere 68-year-old, I wish to age as productively as they have.

Yet there are limits to what a society can spend in this pursuit. As a physician, I know the most costly and dramatic measures may be ineffective and painful. I also know that people in Japan and Sweden, countries that spend far less on medical care, have achieved longer, healthier lives than we have. As a nation, we may be over funding the quest for unlikely cures while under funding research on humbler therapies that could improve people's lives.

What is implied in the first sentence?

A.Americans are better prepared for death than other people.

B.Americans enjoy a higher life quality than ever before.

C.Americans are overconfident of their medical technology.

D.Americans take a vain pride in their long life expectancy.

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