职称英语卫生类高级-2017年职称英语卫生类B级考试押题考前冲刺训练4

副标题:2017年职称英语卫生类B级考试押题考前冲刺训练4

时间:2023-04-28 20:21:01 阅读: 最新文章 文档下载
说明:文章内容仅供预览,部分内容可能不全。下载后的文档,内容与下面显示的完全一致。下载之前请确认下面内容是否您想要的,是否完整无缺。


阅读理解(第31~45题,每题3分,共45分)

  第一篇

  Happy Therapy (诊疗)

  Norman Cousins was a businessman from the United States who often traveled around the world on business. He enjoyed his work and traveling.

  Then, after returning to tile United States from a busy and tiring trip to Russia, Mr. Cousins got sick. Because he had pushed his body to the limit of its strength on the trip, a chemical change began to take place inside him. The material between his bones became weak.

  In less than one week after his return, he could not stand. Every move that he made was painful. He was not able to sleep at night.

  The doctors told Mr. Cousins that they did not know how to cure his problems and he might never get over the illness. Mr. Cousins, however, refused to give up hope.

  Mr. Cousins thought that unhappy thoughts were causing bad chemical changes in his body. He did not want to take medicine to cure himself. Instead, he felt that happy thoughts or laughter might cure his illness.

  He began to experiment on himself while still in the hospital by watching funny shows on television. Mr. Cousins quickly found that ten minutes of real laughter during the day gave him two hours of pain-free sleep at night.

  Deciding that the doctors could not help him, Mr. Cousins left the hospital and checked into a hotel room where he could continue his experiments with laughter. For eight days, Mr. Cousins rested in the hotel room watching funny shows on television, reading funny books, and sleeping whenever he felt tired. Within three weeks, he felt well enough to take a vacation to Puerto Rico where he began running on the beach for exercise.

  After a few months, Mr. Cousins returned to work He had laughed himself back to health.

  1 Mr. Cousins got sick after returning from

  A a busy trip to the US.

  B a tiring trip to Russia.

  C a trip around the world.

  D a trip to Puerto Rico.

  2 How did the doctors respond to Mr. Cousins' illness?

  A They promised to cure him.

  B They didn't think he was really sick.

  C They told him not to give up hope.

  D They said they were unable to help him in any way.

  3 Mr. Cousins attributed the bad chemical changes in his body to

  A unhappy thoughts.

  B a severe illness.

  C weak bones.

  D too much sleep.

  4 What didn't Mr. Cousins do in his experiments with laughter?

  A Watch funny TV shows.

  B Read funny books.

  C Sleep whenever he felt tired.

  D Take medicine.

  5 Mr. Cousins cured his own illness

  A by laughing at others.

  B by acting in funny shows.

  C by taking a happy therapy.

  D by writing funny stories.

  第二篇

  Forty May Be the New 30 as Scientists Redefine Age

  Is 40 really the new 30?In many ways people today act younger than their parents did at the same age.

  Scientists have defined a new age concept and believe it could explain why populations are aging, but at the same time seem to be getting younger.

  Instead of measuring aging by how long people have lived, the scientists have factored in how many more years people can probably still look forward to.

  Using that measure, the average person can get younger in the sense that he or she can have even more years to live as time goes on, said Warren Sanderson of the University of New York in Stony Brook.

  He and Sergei Scherbov of the Vienna Institute of Demography at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, have used their method to estimate how the proportion of elderly people in Germany, Japan and the United States will change in the future.

  The average German was 39.9 years old in 2000 and could plan to live for another 39.2 years, according to research reported in the journal Nature on Wednesday.

  However, by 2050 the average German will be 51.9 years old and will be expected to live another 37.1 years. So middle age in 2050 would occur at around 52 years instead of 40 years as in 2000.

  As people have more and more years to live they have to save more and plan more and they effectively are behaving as if they were younger, said Sanderson.

  Five years ago, the average American was 35.3 years old and could plan for 43.5 more years of life. By 2050, the researchers estimate it will increase to 41.7 years and 45.8 future years.

  A lot of our skills, our education, our savings and the way we deal with our health care depend a great deal on how many years we have to live, said Sanderson.

  This dimension of how many years we have to live has been completely ignored in the discussion of aging so far.

  6 People 40 years of age today seem to be as young as

  A their parents were at the same age.

  B their parents were at the age of 30.

  C their children will be at the same age.

  D their children will be at the age of 30.

  7 The new age concept takes into account the factor of

  A "future years. "

  B "average years. "

  C "past years. "

  D "school years. "

  8 In 2000, middle age for the average German occurred

  A at 37.1 years.

  B at 40 years.

  C at 39.2 years.

  D at 52 years.

  9 By 2002, the average American will live to

  A the age of 41.7.

  B the age of 45.8.

  C the age of 78.8.

  D the age of 87.5.

  10 Which is NOT affected by the number of years we have to live?

  A Our education.

  B Our savings.

  C The way we handle our health care.

  D The number of years we have lived.

2017年职称英语卫生类B级考试押题考前冲刺训练4.doc

本文来源:https://www.wddqw.com/1NMx.html