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

    It is not controversial to say that an unhealthy diet causes bad health. Nor are the basic elements of healthy eating disputed. Obesity raises susceptibility to cancer, and Britain is the sixth most obese country on Earth. That is a public health emergency. But naming the problem is the easy part. No one disputes the costs in quality of life and depleted health budgets of an obese population, but the quest for solutions gets diverted by ideological arguments around responsibility and choice. And the water is muddied by lobbying from the industries that profit from consumption of obesity-inducing products.

    Historical precedent suggests that science and politics can overcome resistance from businesses that pollute and poison, but it takes time, and success often starts small. So it is heartening to note that a programme in Leeds has achieved a reduction in childhood obesity, becoming the first UK city to reverse a fattening trend. The best results were among younger children and in more deprived areas. When 28% of English children aged two to 15 are obese, a national shift on the scale achieved by Leeds would lengthen hundreds of thousands of lives. A significant factor in the Leeds experience appears to be a scheme called HENRY, which helps parents reward behaviours that prevent obesity in children.

    Many members of parliament are uncomfortable even with their own government’s anti-obesity strategy, since it involves a “sugar tax” and a ban on the sale of energy drinks to under-16s. Bans and taxes can be blunt instruments, but their harshest critics can rarely suggest better methods. These critics just oppose regulation itself.

    The relationship between poor health and inequality is too pronounced for governments to be passive about large-scale intervention. People living in the most deprived areas are four times more prone to die from avoidable causes than counterparts in more affluent places. As the structural nature of public health problems becomes harder to ignore, the complaint about overprotective government loses potency.

    In fact, the polarised debate over public health interventions should have been abandoned long ago. Government action works when individuals are motivated to respond. Individuals need governments that expand access to good choices. The HENRY programme was delivered in part through children’s centres. Closing such centres and cutting council budgets doesn’t magically increase reserves of individual self-reliance. The function of a well-designed state intervention is not to deprive people of liberty but to build social capacity and infrastructure that helps people take responsibility for their wellbeing. The obesity crisis will not have a solution devised by left or right ideology—but experience indicates that the private sector needs the incentive of regulation before it starts taking public health emergencies seriously.

49. Why does the author stress the relationship between poor health and inequality?

A
To demonstrate the dilemma of people living in deprived areas.
B
To bring to light the root cause of widespread obesity in Britain.
C
To highlight the area deserving the most attention from the public.
D
To justify government intervention in solving the obesity problem.
使用微信搜索喵呜刷题,轻松应对考试!

答案:

D

解析:

解析:D。根据题干中的poor health and inequality可定位到原文第四段。第四段第一句指出,健康水平低下和社会不平等之间的关系十分明显,以至于政府无法再消极逃避大规模的干预。也就是说政府需要积极干预以解决肥胖问题。随后在第四段最后一句中又指出,由于公共卫生的结构性问题变得愈发难以忽视,对政府保护过度的抱怨也逐渐减弱,也就是说政府的干预是有理由存在的,D项中的intervention在原文中复现,justify对应原文中的complaint...loses potency,故为正确答案。

错项排除:原文虽然提及了贫困地区居民面临的困境,但只是为了证明健康水平低下和不平等之间存在相关性这一现实,所以其目的既不是为了强调贫困地区的困境,也不是为了强调其他地区,故A、C两项错误。B项中的root cause在原文中并没有提及,故排除。

创作类型:
原创

本文链接:49. Why does the author stress the relationship be

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