




版權(quán)說(shuō)明:本文檔由用戶提供并上傳,收益歸屬內(nèi)容提供方,若內(nèi)容存在侵權(quán),請(qǐng)進(jìn)行舉報(bào)或認(rèn)領(lǐng)
文檔簡(jiǎn)介
1、姓名:_ 班級(jí):_ 學(xué)號(hào):_-密-封 -線- 衛(wèi)生類單選集考試卷模擬_考試題考試時(shí)間:120分鐘 考試總分:100分題號(hào)一二三四五總分分?jǐn)?shù)遵守考場(chǎng)紀(jì)律,維護(hù)知識(shí)尊嚴(yán),杜絕違紀(jì)行為,確??荚嚱Y(jié)果公正。1、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of th
2、e university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”t
3、hey did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be pai
4、nless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean tha
5、t they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family mem
6、bers,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.wrongb.purec.goodd.whole2、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad deat
7、h,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,term
8、inally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(5
9、7)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that thei
10、r_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were wo
11、rried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.frequentb.terminalc.earlyd.light3、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill peopl
12、e,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also ans
13、wered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their
14、 sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged
15、 death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed conc
16、erns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.reportsb.opinionsc.questionsd.remarks
17、4、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or ca
18、ncer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of lif
19、e or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associa
20、ted a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting famil
21、y present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a bu
22、rden on their families,she said( )a.differentlyb.similarlyc.strangelyd.fully5、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washing
23、ton in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the sa
24、me views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half
25、 of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives
26、 close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the w
27、ashington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.tob.asc.atd.for6、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study sug
28、gest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good an
29、d bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的)
30、,and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to th
31、em,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64
32、) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.workingb.dyingc.talkingd.dreaming7、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they
33、 think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferenc
34、es for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe re
35、asons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for t
36、heir families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,v
37、ig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.arguingb.proposingc.hopingd.knowing8、preferences vary on circumstanc
38、es of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to descri
39、be good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.
40、many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolon
41、ged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life
42、,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emld.taken9、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new st
43、udy suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their preferences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described
44、good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deaththe reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent
45、(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult for their families.most men said that their_(60) were very importan
46、t to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional
47、 or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher some were worried_(65)their need for care would be a burden on their families,she said( )a.whereb.unlessc.becaused.while10、preferences vary on circumstances of dyingamong terminally(晚期)ill people,attitudes differ on what
48、they think constitutes a _(51)or bad death,the results of a new study suggest drelizabeth k vig of the university of washington in seattle and colleagues interviewed 26men with_(52)heart disease or cancer the men were asked to describe good and bad deaths,and they also answered_(53)about their prefe
49、rences for dying“in this small study,terminally ill men described good and bad deaths_(54) vig said”they did not hold the same views about such issues_(55)the presence of others at the very end of life or preferred location of death.many of the men considered_(56) in their sleep to be a good deathth
50、e reasons were varied and included not_(57)that death was imminent(即將發(fā)生的),and that death would be painless.for close to half of the men,a prolonged(拖延的)death was_(58)abad death some of the men associated a prolonged death with prolonged pain,_(59)others thought a prolonged death would be difficult f
51、or their families.most men said that their_(60) were very important to them,but this did not mean that they wanted relatives close at the_(61) of death. “ valuing family did not also_(62)wanting family present at the very end of life,” vig said.”in fact,some expressed concerns_(63)burdening loved ones,vig said.for instance,some men were worried about the emotional or_(64) impact on their family members,according to the washington researcher so
溫馨提示
- 1. 本站所有資源如無(wú)特殊說(shuō)明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請(qǐng)下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
- 2. 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請(qǐng)聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權(quán)益歸上傳用戶所有。
- 3. 本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁(yè)內(nèi)容里面會(huì)有圖紙預(yù)覽,若沒(méi)有圖紙預(yù)覽就沒(méi)有圖紙。
- 4. 未經(jīng)權(quán)益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文庫(kù)網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲(chǔ)空間,僅對(duì)用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護(hù)處理,對(duì)用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對(duì)任何下載內(nèi)容負(fù)責(zé)。
- 6. 下載文件中如有侵權(quán)或不適當(dāng)內(nèi)容,請(qǐng)與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
- 7. 本站不保證下載資源的準(zhǔn)確性、安全性和完整性, 同時(shí)也不承擔(dān)用戶因使用這些下載資源對(duì)自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。
最新文檔
- 2025-2035年全球及中國(guó)施工骨料行業(yè)市場(chǎng)發(fā)展現(xiàn)狀及發(fā)展前景研究報(bào)告
- 2025年汽車座椅調(diào)角器項(xiàng)目合作計(jì)劃書(shū)
- 2025年年暖通項(xiàng)目合作計(jì)劃書(shū)
- 2025年網(wǎng)絡(luò)及通信協(xié)議處理軟件合作協(xié)議書(shū)
- 貨代空運(yùn)培訓(xùn)
- 2025年質(zhì)控校準(zhǔn)試劑凝血產(chǎn)品項(xiàng)目建議書(shū)
- 2025年企業(yè)文化展示系統(tǒng)項(xiàng)目發(fā)展計(jì)劃
- 2025年輕油蒸汽轉(zhuǎn)化催化劑合作協(xié)議書(shū)
- 化工物流企業(yè)ESG實(shí)踐與創(chuàng)新戰(zhàn)略研究報(bào)告
- 本冊(cè)批發(fā)企業(yè)數(shù)字化轉(zhuǎn)型與智慧升級(jí)戰(zhàn)略研究報(bào)告
- 2025年安徽衛(wèi)生健康職業(yè)學(xué)院?jiǎn)握新殬I(yè)技能測(cè)試題庫(kù)及參考答案1套
- 《澳大利亞》導(dǎo)學(xué)案
- 課件-DeepSeek從入門到精通
- 【MOOC】理解馬克思-南京大學(xué) 中國(guó)大學(xué)慕課MOOC答案
- 離婚調(diào)查取證申請(qǐng)書(shū)
- 家庭電路故障分析-課件
- 設(shè)備學(xué)習(xí)電子圍欄g5tk400說(shuō)明書(shū)
- 雙高專業(yè)群電子商務(wù)專業(yè)群申報(bào)書(shū)
- 外研版一起五年級(jí)英語(yǔ)下冊(cè)全冊(cè)教案教學(xué)設(shè)計(jì)版
- 鋰電池項(xiàng)目融資計(jì)劃書(shū)【范文】
- 三八婦女節(jié)主題班會(huì)PPT課件
評(píng)論
0/150
提交評(píng)論