(题文)(2017·北京)People ______ better access to health care than they used to, and they’re living longer as a result.
A. will have B. have
C. had D. had had
高二英语单项填空困难题
(题文)(2017·北京)People ______ better access to health care than they used to, and they’re living longer as a result.
A. will have B. have
C. had D. had had
高二英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
People ________ better access to health care than they used to, and they are living longer as a result
A. will have B. have
C. had D. had had
高二英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。
1.Why does the university offer the two programs?
A. To provide better health care for students.
B. To keep students safe walking late or alone.
C. To help visitors tour around the college.
2.When can students call Campus Safety Office?
A. Anytime of the day. B. From 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. C. From midnight to 7 a.m.
3.To whom is the speaker mainly talking?
A. Tourists at the college. B. New teachers. C. Parents of students.
高二英语长对话中等难度题查看答案及解析
Nowadays, basic health care services are ______ to almost all the Chinese people, contributing to a rise in average life expectancy.
A.alternative B.abundant C.accessible D.creative
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Smoking is so harmful to people’s health that it kills __________ people each year than automobile accidents.
A. seven more times B. seven times more C. over seven times D. seven times
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Smoking is so harmful to people’s health that it kills __________ people each year than automobile accidents.
A. seven more times B. seven times more
C. over seven times D. seven times
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
In my opinion, jogging for some time is _________ to our health.
A.available | B.accessible | C.beneficial | D.especial |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Unlike Britain, the US does not have a national health care service. Most people buy medical insurance to help pay for medical care. The government only helps pay for some medical care for the old and the people who are on low incomes. The problems of those who cannot afford insurance have become an important political subject.
In Britain, when people are ill, they usually go to a family doctor first. However, people in America sometimes go straight to an expert. Children are usually taken to a doctor who is an expert in the treatment of children. In Britain, if a patient needs to see a specialist doctor, their family doctor will usually recommend a specialist, which will save more time and money both for the patients and the public fund(基金).
In Britain, doctors do not go to people’s homes when they are ill. People always make appointments to see the doctor in the doctor’s office. In a serious situation, people call for an ambulance. In America, hospitals must treat all seriously ill patients, even if they do not have medical insurance. The gov-ernment will then help pay for some of the cost of the medical care.
1.The majority of Americans pay for medical care________.
A. through the national health care service B. by buying medical insurance
C. with the help of the government
D. by increasing their income
2.The author implies in Paragraph 2 that________.
A. Americans don’t trust family doctors
B. family doctors are helpless to the patients
C. he is more in favor of the British medical care service
D. sick children should go to family doctors first
3. In the States, seriously ill patients will________.
A. be treated if they have an insurance
B. go to see the doctor by making an appointment
C. receive treatment even without insurance
D. normally go to see an expert for treatment
4.Which of the following would be the best title for this passage?
A. Health Care in the United States and Britain
B. Types of Doctors in the United States
C. Treatment of Sick Children in the United States
D. Medical Insurance in the United States and Britain
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Mental health experts estimate that depression affects more than 120 million people worldwide. It severely affects the person’s quality of life and, in extreme cases, can lead to people killing themselves. Anti-depressant medicines have been shown as an effective treatment for most patients. But the drugs are unable to help a small number of people with the disorder.
For such person, doctors may suggest deep transcranial magnetic stimulation(经颅磁力刺激), or DTMS for short. In this treatment, patients wear a special helmet connected to a machine. An electric coil(线圈)in the helmet sends out regular waves of electromagnetic energy. These beating sounds produce changes in the brain area responsible for the disorder.
Electromagnetic stimulation(刺激) was first tried to treat depression over 30 years ago. Now, a new generation of wiring can direct the energy on one part of the brain. DTMS starts with daily 20-mimute-long treatments for 20 to 30 days. The patient then returns for treatment two to three times a week for several weeks.
The only side effect is sometimes slight head pain. Aaron Tendler is the chief medical officer of Brains way, the company that makes the machine. He said that it’s hard to say how long the effects of DTMS last.
DTMS is being used in Europe to treat both depression and other conditions. Patients there are getting treated for dementia, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. And DTMS is even being used to help some Europeans give up smoking.
But in the United States, the Federal Food and Drug Administration(FFDA) has approved it only for the treatment of depression which cannot be treated by medicine. But clinical tests are continuing on other conditions, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder. Both of the disorders, like depression, can get in the way of a person working and getting along with people.
1.Why are people concerned about depression?
A.Because it may lead to death sometimes.
B.Because only a few people can recover from it.
C.Because it does not affect social communication.
D.Because medicine treatment usually fails to work on it.
2.How does DTMS help patients with depression?
A.By wearing a helmet in daily life.
B.By performing an operation on the head.
C.By making them face the disease bravely.
D.By letting electromagnetic waves stimulate the brain.
3.What can we infer about DTMS from the text?
A.It is quite safe to use it worldwide.
B.The use of it in America is forbidden.
C.It can cure patients of depression in a month.
D.It will be widely used in treating more diseases.
4.What would be the best title for the text?
A.Finding Hope in A Hopeless Depression
B.DTMS - A New Treatment for Depression
C.The Killer of Modern Humans Depression
D.Using Electromagnetic Waves to Cure Depression
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
More people are dying from hepatitis(肝炎) than AIDS and tuberculosis, warns World Health Organization. The World Health Organization(WHO) has urged for action to wipe out hepatitis as ongoing illness worsens.
In its first global report on the infection, it said the number of people dying from treatable forms of the disease, often caused by alcohol and drug abuse, is rising. Viral hepatitis is believed to have killed 1.34 million people in 2015, and amount similar to that of tuberculosis.
But while those are both falling, hepatitis deaths are on the rise—increasing by 22 per cent since the turn of the century.
However, most of the 325 million people infected are completely unaware they have the virus and some lack life-saving medicines. As a result, millions of people are at risk of a slow progression to chronic liver disease, cancer and even death, the WHO warned, Margaret Chan, director general of the WHO, said: “Viral hepatitis is now a major public health challenge that requires an urgent response.”
The two most common forms, which are responsible for 96 per cent of deaths from the disease, are hepatitis B(HBV) and hepatitis C (HCV)
HBV can be passed on through unprotected sex and bodily fluids(液体). It requires life-long treatment with a drug commonly used to battle HIV. New infections of this type of the disease are falling, thanks to a vaccine given to 84 per cent of newborns across the world. However, just nine per cent of sufferers know they are infected, meaning many go under the radar and miss out on treatment.
HCV, usually spread through blood-to-blood contact with an infected person, can be cured relatively swiftly, but many patients across the world are unable to afford the medication. Around 1.75 million people were newly infected with HCV in 2015, bringing the global total to 71 million, figures suggests. But four fifths of those infected with this type of the disease are unaware they are suffering, the WHO warned.
Experts looking at the cases have identified unsafe healthcare procedure and injection drug use as the top causes. Gottfried Hirnschall, director of WHO’s Department of HIV and the Global Hepatitis Programme, said the WHO was working with governments, drugmakers and diagnostics companies to improve access.
He added: More countries are making hepatitis services available for people in need—a diagnostic test cost less than $1 (78p) and the cure for hepatitis C can be below $ 200 (£156). But the data clearly highlight the urgency with which we must address the remaining gaps in testing and treatment.
Charles Gore, president of the World Hepatitis Alliance, said: “For the first time in the history of viral hepatitis, we have an understanding of the true impact of the disease.”
1.Who are likely to die from the treatable hepatitis?
A. Those taking medicines. B. Those suffering from cancer.
C. Those caring their illnesses. D. Those being heavy drinkers.
2.What can we learn about hepatitis B?
A. Patients need to take drugs for the rest of their lives.
B. People will not get the new infections due to a vaccine.
C. Patients can be cured effectively at a costly price.
D. People will get infected through blood accidentally.
3.According to the statistics in 2015, which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. Hepatitis C is responsible for 96 per cent of deaths.
B. Around 1.75 million people were newly infected with hepatitis.
C. Most of those infected with HCV are aware they are suffering.
D. Tuberculosis is believed to have killed more than 1 million people.
4.The main purpose of writing the passage is _____.
A. to call on the public to fight with hepatitis
B. to request the public to care about the hepatitis patients
C. to warn the public to learn of the danger of the disease
D. to persuade the public to take regular examinations yearly
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析