首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Does the publisher of Douglas Starr’s excellent Blood—An Epic History, of Medicine and Commerce actually expect to sell many cop
Does the publisher of Douglas Starr’s excellent Blood—An Epic History, of Medicine and Commerce actually expect to sell many cop
admin
2009-06-24
31
问题
Does the publisher of Douglas Starr’s excellent Blood—An Epic History, of Medicine and Commerce actually expect to sell many copies? Whoever chose the title, certain to scare off the squeamish, and the subtitle, which makes the effort sound like a dry, dense survey text, has really done this book a disservice. In fact, the brave and curious will enjoy a brightly written, intriguing, and disquieting book, with some important lessons for public health.
66.____________________
The book begins with a historical view on centuries of lore about blood—in particular, the belief that blood carried the evil humors of disease and required occasional draining. As recently as the Revolutionary War, bloodletting was widely applied to treat fevers. The idea of using one person’s blood to heal another is only about 75 years old—although rogue scientists had experimented with transfusing animal blood at least as early as the 1600s. The first transfusion experiments involved stitching a donor’s vein (in early cases the physician’s) to a patient’s vein.
67.____________________
Sabotaged by notions about the "purity" of their groups’ blood, Japan and Germany lagged well behind the Allies in transfusion science. Once they realized they were losing injured troops the Allies had learned to save, they tried to catch up, conducting horrible and unproductive experiments such as draining blood from POWs and injecting them with horse blood or polymers.
68.____________________
During the early mid-1980s, Starr says, 10,000 American hemophiliacs and 12,000 others contracted HIV from transfusions and receipt of blood products. Blood banks both here and abroad moved slowly to acknowledge the threat of the virus and in some cases even acted with criminal negligence, allowing the distribution of blood they knew was tainted. This is not new material. But Starr’s insights add a dimension to a story first explored in the late Randy Shihs’s And the Bond Played On.
69.____________________
Is the blood supply safe now? Screening procedures and technology have gotten much more advanced. Yet it’s disturbing to read Starr’s contention that a person receiving multiple transfusions today has about a 1 in 90,000 chance of contracting HIV—far higher than the "one in a million" figure that blood bankers once blithely and falsely quoted. Moreover, new pathogens threaten to emerge and spread through the increasingly high-speed, global blood-product network faster than science can stop them. This prompts Starr to argue that today’s blood stores are "simultaneously safer and more threatening" than when distribution was less sophisticated.
70.____________________
A. The massive wartime blood drives laid the groundwork for modern blood-banking, which has saved countless lives. Unfortunately, these developments also set the stage for a great modern tragedy—the spread of AIDS through the international blood supply.
B. There is so much drama, power, resonance, and important information in this book that it would be a shame if the squeamish were scared off. Perhaps the key lesson is this: The public health must always be guarded against the pressures and pitfalls of competitive markets and human fallibility.
C. In his "chronicle of a resource", Starr covers an enormous amount of ground. He gives us an account of mankind’s attitudes over a 400-year period towards this "precious, mysterious, and hazardous material"; of medicine’s efforts to understand, control, and develop blood’s life-saying properties; and of the multibillion-dollar industry that benefits from it. He describes disparate institutions that use blood, from the military and the pharmaceutical industry to blood banks. The culmination is a rich examination of how something as horrifying as distributing blood tainted with the HIV virus could have occurred.
D. The book’s most interesting section considers the huge strides transfusion science took during World War II. Medicine benefited significantly from the initiative to collect and supply blood to the Allied troops and from new trauma procedures developed to administer it. It was then that scientists learned to separate blood into useful elements, such as freeze-dried plasma and clotting factors, paving the way for both battlefield miracles and dramatic improvement in the lives of hemophiliacs.
E. Starr’s tale ends with a warning about the safety of today’s blood supply.
F. Starr obtained memos and other evidence used in Japanese, French, and Canadian criminal trials over the tainted-blood distribution. (American blood banks enjoyed legal protections that made U.S. trials more complex and provided less closure for those harmed.) His account of the French situation is particularly poignant. Starr explains that in postwar France, donating blood was viewed as a sacred and patriotic act. Prison populations were urged to give blood as a way to connect more with society. Unfortunately, the French came to believe that such benevolence somehow offered a magical protection to the blood itself and that it would be unseemly to question volunteer donors about their medical history or sexual or drug practices. Combined with other factors, including greed and hubris, this led to tragedy. Some blood banks were collecting blood from high-risk groups as late as 1990, well into the crisis. And France, along with Canada, Japan, and even Britain, stalled approval and distribution of safer, American heat-treated plasma products when they became available, in part because they were giving their domestic companies time to catch up with scientific advances.
选项
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/CMTd777K
本试题收录于:
公共英语五级笔试题库公共英语(PETS)分类
0
公共英语五级笔试
公共英语(PETS)
相关试题推荐
ASuccessStoryAt19,BenWayisalreadyamillionaire,andoneofagrowingnumberofteenagerswhohave【C1】______theirfo
ASuccessStoryAt19,BenWayisalreadyamillionaire,andoneofagrowingnumberofteenagerswhohave【C1】______theirfo
TheySayIreland’stheBestIrelandisthebestplaceintheworldtoliveinfor2005,accordingtoalifequalityranking
SuccessfulLanguageLearners1.Somepeopleseemtohaveaknackforlearninglanguages.Theycanpickupnewvocabulary,mast
TheySayIreland’stheBestIrelandisthebestplaceintheworldtoliveinfor2005,accordingtoalifequalityranking
Whichofthefollowingdoesthefirstparagraphimply?WhichofthefollowingisNOTmentionedorimpliedinthepassage?
WhichstatementisTRUEofthedescriptioninthefirsttwoparagraphs?Thesixthparagraphmainlystatethattheresearchers_
WhichstatementisTRUEofthedescriptioninthefirsttwoparagraphs?Whatdoresearcherswanttofindout,accordingtothe
One’seconomicconditionoftenaffectshisorherwayoflife.
随机试题
AstudyofhowolderteenagersusesocialmediahasfoundthatFacebookis"notjustontheslide,itisbasicallydeadandburi
Oneofthepoliticalissueswehearalotaboutlatelyiscampaignfinancereform.Thepeoplewhoarecallingfor【21】usuallywan
汗证,邪热郁蒸证的最佳选方是
胰岛素对脂肪代谢调节错误的是
正常生育者射精后1小时内精子活力a级+b级应该大于()。
根据我国现行宪法和1998年村民委员会组织法的规定,村民委员会的性质可以概括为下列选项的哪一项?()
已知某工业企业2010年下半年各月工业总产出与月初工人数资料如下表:请根据上述资料回答下列问题:下列表述不正确的有()。
甲公司是一家上市公司。有关资料如下:(1)2015年1月1日,甲公司以定向增发普通股股票的方式,从非关联方处取得了乙公司70%的股权,于同日通过产权交易所完成了该项股权转让手续,并完成了工商变更登记,取得股权后甲公司能够控制乙公司的生产经营决策。甲公司定
某企业2001年1月1日发行3年期面值为500万元的债券,票面利率10%,企业按470万元的价格折价出售,如果企业按直线法摊销折价,截止2002年底企业为此项应付债券所承担的财务费用是()万元。
单位举办绿色环保宣传周活动,但是没有专项经费,宣传中也不允许耗费纸张,你怎么开展此次活动?
最新回复
(
0
)