刷题刷出新高度,偷偷领先!偷偷领先!偷偷领先! 关注我们,悄悄成为最优秀的自己!

单选题

  How a rabbit study and an ex-student boost my hopes for a future of “love and dignity”

【A】At whatever grade level teachers find themselves, from kindergarten to the final class at medical or law school, few moments stir the emotions as deeply as when former students reappear years and often decades later with an update on where their journey has taken them and what resiliencies (韧性) have been the pavement on which they’ve traveled.
【B】So it was when a recent letter came from Kelli Harding, a student 21 years ago in my Peace Studies summer course in Washington. The weekly tuition-free class, in a roomy space that Ralph Nader and his Public Citizen nonprofit group provided, was discussion-based and required no useless homework or exams. Just come in and figure out how to increase peace and decrease violence. And do it today, tomorrow is too late. The course attracted mostly congressional interns (实习生), with a few exceptions like Kelli who was in Washington as an AmeriCorps volunteer.
【C】Her year-long service included comforting AIDs patients at a free health clinic and delivering meals to the homebound. It was a world apart from her undergraduate days at the University of California, Berkeley majoring in political science. The Washington experience, which Kelli would later call “transformative,” was the fuel that carried her into medicine to earn a master’s degree in public health from Columbia University and a medical degree from the University of Rochester, and almost two decades of practice as an emergency-room psychiatrist (精神科医生) at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center.
【D】Kelli’s letter, a literate update on both her personal and professional life, touched my heart, and especially so when saying that two decades later she still has the course text, “Solutions to Violence,” and that “it remains one of my favorite possessions.” She lives in Lower Manhattan with her husband, Padraic, whom she met on a flight to London, and their three boys.
【E】If Kelli stands out, it’s because she is also a gifted writer. Last month, Atria Books published her book The Rabbit Effect: Live Longer, Happier, and Healthier with the Groundbreaking Science of Kindness.
【F】With a blending of free-flowing confessional prose and scholarly research found in 461 notes, Kelli met my expectations that her ideas and ideals would be sound and singular. “Despite our scientific progress,” she writes, “Americans are remarkably unhealthy. In 2016, the United States ranked forty-third in the world for life expectancy... It is also by far the world’s most expensive place to get sick.”
【G】Enter the rabbits—not those running around in our woodlands but ones serving in two month-long medical experiments to test the effects of eating a high-fat diet and the connections between cholesterol and heart disease. With similar diets, the expectations were that all the rabbits would have similar cloggings of their arteries (动脉堵塞). Yet one group had 60% fewer of them.
【H】The reason? Instead of receiving the standard care given to lab animals, the 60% group was watched over by a newcomer to the lab who, Kelli writes, “handled the animals differently. When she fed her rabbits she talked to them and petted them. She didn’t just pass out food, she gave them love... The studies indicate something is missing in the traditional biomedical model. It wasn’t diet or genetics that made a difference in which rabbits got sick and which stayed healthy. It was kindness.”
【I】Amid the political noise about Obamacare, Medicare, Medicaid, health insurance and thieving pharmaceutical (医药的) companies, Kelli Harding stands apart from the crowd calling for quick fixes, the simpler the better. She has walked too many miles in the halls of hospitals visiting too many far-gone patients and seeing too many medical mistakes to go along with conventional thinking. 
【J】“The rabbit effect,” she explains, means that “when it comes to our health, we’ve been missing some crucial pieces: hidden factors behind what really makes us healthy. Factors like love, friendship, and dignity. The designs of our neighborhoods, schools, and workplaces. There’s a social dimension to health that we’ve completely overlooked in our efforts to find the best and most cutting-edge medical care... Ultimately, what affects our health in the most meaningful ways has more to do with how we treat one another, how we live, and how we think about what it means to be human than with anything that happens in the doctor’s office.”
【K】In more than a few passages, she relates the stories of men and women who came up against assembly-line medicine where patients were treated mostly as pieces of flesh. “Clinically,” she writes, “it’s common to see two patients with the same condition, such as recovering from a heart attack, have two very different courses based on seemingly irrelevant factors, such as their family relationships or their educational levels. In my practice, the sickest people I see often share similar backgrounds: loneliness, abuse, poverty, or discrimination. For them, the medical model isn’t enough. It’s like fixing up an airplane engine and ignoring that the pilot is on his third drink at the bar and a massive storm is overhead... To properly care for patients, we also need to care about the lives of the people getting the care.”
【L】Kelli wastes no time taking potshots at (随意批评) the medical establishment and its body-centered biomedicine methods. Instead, she remains positive, holding up for praise one of her medical school professors, George Engel, “who always noticed not just a patient’s physical condition but little details about her life, such as if she had family pictures up in her hospital room or flowers delivered. He was the kind of trusted doctor you’d feel relieved to see and welcome into the room with a sick family member. He’d sit down to talk with the patient not just about medical problems, but about her life and priorities. He built a large consultation service to address the holistic (整体的) needs of hospitalized patients, including psychological and social factors.”
【M】It’s a guess how many George Engels in their white jackets are at work these days and another speculation on the number of Kelli Hardings the nation is blessed with. May the totals be large and getting larger.

42. George Engel, in treating his patients, not only looks into their symptoms but also into things like the emotional support they receive.

A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
K
K
L
L
M
M
使用微信搜索喵呜刷题,轻松应对考试!

答案:

L

解析:

36. 凯莉·哈丁的文学天赋也很出众。

解析:E。根据题干中的distinguishes herself by her literary talent可定位至原文E段第一句。该句提到,凯莉的过人之处在于她还是一位有天赋的作家。题干中的distinguishes herself是对该句中stands out的同义替换,literary talent对应该句中的a gifted writer,题干是对原文E段第一句的同义转述,故正确答案为E。

37. 凯莉·哈丁认为美国的医疗模式不足以满足最需要帮助的患者。

解析:K。根据题干中的medical model和sufficient可定位至原文K段第四句。该句提到,对他们来说,用现有的医疗模式来治疗是不够的。这里的“他们”指的是前一句中提到的“病情最严重的人”,与题干中“最需要帮助的患者(patients who need help most)”相对应,而题干中出现了定位句中的原词medical model,其中的sufficient是对定位句中enough的同义替换,题干是对原文K段第三、四句部分内容的同义转述,故正确答案为K。

38. 凯莉·哈丁与那些寻求快速、简单解决美国医疗问题的人不同。

解析:I。根据题干中的differs from和quick and simple solutions可定位至原文I段第一句后半句。该处提到,公众也在寻求快速解决问题的方法,希望越简单越好,而凯莉·哈丁却有不同的想法。题干中的differs from是对定位句中stands apart from的同义替换,seeking quick and simple solutions对应定位句中的calling for quick fixes, the simpler the better,题干是对I段第一句后半句的同义转述,故正确答案为I。

39. 凯莉·哈丁参加过作者开设的一门暑期课程。

解析:B。根据题干中的a participant in a summer course可定位至原文B段第一句。该句提到,凯莉·哈丁是作者21年前在华盛顿教授“和平研究”暑期课程时的学生。题干是对这一内容的同义转述,其中summer course原词复现,故正确答案为B。

40. 根据凯莉·哈丁的说法,科学进步并没有使美国人变得更健康,也没有使其寿命变得更长。

解析:F。根据题干中的scientific advances、healthier和prolonged their life可定位至原文F段第二句。该句说凯莉在书中写道:“尽管美国的科学在进步,但美国人的身体却很不健康。2016年,美国的预期寿命位居世界第43位……”题干是对此内容的同义转述,其中的scientific advances是对定位句中scientific progress的同义替换,have not made Americans healthier对应定位句中的Americans are remarkably unhealthy,nor prolonged their life对应句中的ranked forty-third...for life expectancy,故正确答案为F。

41. 凯莉·哈丁对她目前生活的描述给了作者很深的触动。

解析:D。根据题干中的deeply moved和wrote about her current life可定位至原文D段第一句前半句。该处提到,凯莉的来信文采斐然,讲述了她最近的个人生活和职业生活,让作者很受触动。题干中的deeply moved对应定位句中的touched my heart,wrote about her current life对应定位句中的a literate update on both her personal and professional life,题干是对原文D段第一句部分内容的同义转述,故正确答案为D。

42. 乔治·恩格尔在治疗他的患者时,不仅关注他们的症状,还关注他们获得的情感支持等。

解析:L。根据题干中的George Engel、looks into their symptoms和emotional support可定位至原文L段第二句。该句提到,凯莉非常赞赏乔治·恩格尔教授的做法,并说他一直以来不仅关注病人的身体状况,还会注意到他们生活的小细节,比如病房里是否挂着家人合照,是否有人送花。题干中的looks into their symptoms是对定位句中noticed...a patient’s physical condition的同义替换,emotional support是对定位句中合照、送花等细节的概括总结,题干是对L段第二句部分内容的同义转述,故正确答案为L。

43. 根据凯莉·哈丁的说法,与饮食或遗传相比,兔子的健康状况更多地受到人类对它们的关爱的影响。

解析:H。根据题干中的rabbits’ health、humans’ kindness和diet or genetics可定位至原文H段最后两句。该处提到,凯莉在书中写道:有的兔子患病而有的兔子仍然健康,真正的影响因素不是饮食或基因,而是关爱。题干是对这两句话的同义转述,其中kindness和diet or genetics为原词复现,故正确答案为H。

44. 凯莉·哈丁在华盛顿的经历改变了她的人生。

解析:C。根据题干中的Washington和changed her life可定位至原文C段第三句前半句。该处提到,凯莉后来称这段在华盛顿的经历“彻底改变了她”。题干是对此内容的同义转述,其中的changed her life是对定位句中transformative一词的同义替换,故正确答案为C。

45. 在努力提供最好的医疗服务时,人们没有考虑到社会对健康的影响。

解析:J。根据题干中的A social aspect to health、has not been taken into account和the best medical care可定位至原文J段第四句。该句提到,我们在努力寻找最顶尖、最前沿的医疗保健时,完全忽视了健康的社会层面。题干是对此内容的同义转述,其中的A social aspect to health是对定位句中a social dimension to health的同义替换,has not been taken into account是对句中we’ve completely overlooked的同义替换,the best medical care原词复现,故正确答案为J。

创作类型:
原创

本文链接:42. George Engel, in treating his patients, not on

版权声明:本站点所有文章除特别声明外,均采用 CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 许可协议。转载请注明文章出处。

让学习像火箭一样快速,微信扫码,获取考试解析、体验刷题服务,开启你的学习加速器!

分享考题
share