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【单选题】
All the recent news on AIDS is bad. The death of Rock Rudson last year raised public concern about the epidemic almost to the point of panic. But that reaction subsided for a time as people were reassured about the reliability of new tests for donated blood and the improbability of contracting the disease casually. Now, general concern is focused not so much on personal risk--most cases continue to occur in the high-risk groups of male homosexuals and drug addicts--but on the growing realization that this disease is having a deep impact on our society in a number of ways. It is absorbing financial and other resources. AIDS patients require long-term care in hospitals and outpatient facilities, and the health care systems in such cities as New York and San Francisco are not prepared to handle the demand. Bellevue, a large and respected municipal hospital in New York, devotes one out of every four beds in its department of medicine to AIDS patients. Most are hospitalized for months, and few have any private insurance. The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta estimates that hospital expenditures for the first 10,000 AIDS patients (there are now more than 16,000) were about $1.4 billion. The total economic cost to the nation of this group of cases is estimated to come to $6 billion in health care, disability, and lost productivity. Private insurers were unprepared for the crisis since the invariably fatal disease hits primarily young people. Ninety percent of the victims are between 20 and 49 years old. It is becoming increasingly difficult for those in high-risk groups to get health and life assurance, and in the absence of private coverage, public funds must be used. In addition, many of the victims are, for all practical purposes, homeless, rejected by disapproving or frightened friends and family, without employment, and in need of emotional and psychological support. It must be given. More important, there is bad news on the medical front. In spite of a stepped-up research program there is no sign of an imminent breakthrough to a cure. More than 8,000 American victims have already died no one has recovered. The public has also learned that earlier assurances that only 5 to 10 percent of those who have been exposed to the virus will contract the disease were far too optimistic. Researchers have now raised that figure to at least a third. Estimates of expected future cases have, accordingly, been adjusted upward. A Bellevue doctor reflected the despair of those who deal with AIDS patients every day: 'The cost is staggering, the grief is overwhelming, and there is no end in sight.' Yet these physicians and others continue to work and to hope. Others not directly involved can help by giving support to public funding for research, hospital and hospice care, and support services. A public resolve to provide care now and an eventual cure for those who suffer is the best response. The word 'subsided' in Para. 1 probably means '______'.
A.
lessened
B.
sank
C.
vanished
D.
settled
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【简答题】____层的单元式住宅和通廊式住宅等高层民用建筑应设臵消防电梯。
【多选题】薪酬管理的原则包括
A.
公平原则
B.
竞争原则
C.
激励原则
D.
合法原则
E.
按劳付酬原则
【单选题】可使呼吸膜面积减小的因素不包括
A.
肺气肿
B.
肺不张
C.
肺水肿
D.
肺实变
E.
以上都不是
【多选题】薪酬管理的原则包括:
A.
合法性
B.
公平性
C.
及时性
D.
经济性
【判断题】十二层及十二层以上的单元式住宅和通廊式住宅应设置消防电梯。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【简答题】由于流体具有 ,液流在管道中流动需要损耗一部分能量,它由 损失和 损失两部分组成。(说明:对于两个空以上的填空题,作答的时候需要同学们注意,多个答案之间用空格隔开。)
【简答题】()的单元式住宅和通廊式住宅应设消防电梯。
【多选题】薪酬管理的原则包括:
A.
竞争原则
B.
公平原则
C.
激励原则
D.
合法原则
E.
按劳付酬原则
【简答题】液压系统中的压力取决于( ),执行元件的运动速度取决于( ) 。 2 .液压传动装置由( )和( )四部分组成,其中( )和( )为能量转换装置。 3 . 液体在管道中存在两种流动状态,( )时粘性力起主导作用,( )时惯性力起主导作用,液体的流动状态可用( )来判断。 4 .在研究流动液体时,把假...
【简答题】液流在管道中的损耗由_损失和_损失两部分组成。
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