【单选题】

肺结核患者在接受抗结核治疗时,评价疗效首先要看。

A.

痰菌转阴

B.

症状消失

C.

X线空洞闭合,炎性阴影消失

D.

血沉正常

E.

血清结核抗体阴性

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【A2型选择题】

男,20岁。上腹部受到撞击后1d,右上腹及背部疼痛伴呕吐咖啡样液4h。腹部立位X射线片:未见膈下游离气体,腰大肌轮廓模糊,胃边界清晰。最可能的诊断是(     )。

A.

肝破裂

B.

横结肠损伤

C.

胃穿孔

D.

肠系膜损伤

E.

十二指肠损伤

【单选题】

下列辅料中,水不溶型包衣材料是(   )。

A.
聚乙烯醇
B.
醋酸纤维素
C.
羟丙基纤维素
D.
聚乙二醇
E.
聚维酮
【单选题】

依据《中华人民共和国教育法》的规定,学校或者其他教育机构违反本法规定,颁发学位证书、学历证书或者其他学业证书,情节严重的,责令停止相关招生资格( )。

A.
一年以上三年以下
B.
五日以上十五日以下
C.
一年以上两年以下
D.
十日以上三十日以下
【单选题】

某增值税一般纳税人当月销项税额合计120万元,进项税额合计80万元,进项税额转出5万元,已交税金10万元,则月末的账务处理正确的是( )。

A.
借:应交税费——应交增值税(已交税金)  35 贷:应交税费—应交增值税(转出未交增值税)35
B.
借:应交税费——应交增值税(转出多交增值税)10  贷:应交税费——未交增值税      10
C.
借:应交税费——应交增值税(转出未交增值税35  贷:应交税费——未交增值税      35
D.
无需进行账务处理
【单选题】

借款人还款能力的主要标志就是(  )。

A.
借款人的现金流量是否充足
B.
借款人的资产负债比率是否足够低
C.
借款人的管理水平是否很高
D.
借款人的销售收入和利润是否足够高
【单选题】

阅读某教师《浅谈“留白”艺术在阅读教学中的应用》教研论文片段,按要求答题。
在具体组织课堂教学的过程中,教师切勿将课堂“排满”,应注重合理“留白”。其中,合理“留白”的主要原因如下:学生会基于过大的“留白”进行大范围的思考,且通常不知如何将自身想法充分表达出来,长此以往,会导致学生对学习失去信心,而倘若“留白”过小,学生无需过多思考便可以获取答案,时间一长,会放大学生的“惰性”。基于以上原因,教师在设计问题的过程中,应重视合理调配问题的梯度,促使学生可以在“努力”以后,获取答案。例如,教师在讲解《陈情表》一课时,可以优先基于题目设计问题,学生想要更好地解决这些问题,就需要对文本进行认真、详细的阅读,进而在理解文章大概含义以后,思考以及解决问题。
对上述内容的相关分析,正确的是()。

A.
教师注重“留白”在阅读教学中很重要
B.
“留白”过大或过小都不利于教师课堂教学
C.
“留白”不合理,会导致学生产生惰性
D.
对于教师设计的问题,学生经过认真、详细阅读就可解决
【单选题】

男性,25岁,因患缩窄性心包炎住院进一步治疗,哪项治疗最有效

A.
动脉补充能量合剂
B.
抗结核治疗
C.
卧床增加营养
D.
静脉补充能量合剂
E.
心包切除术
【单选题】

在下列方法中,属于精神分析治疗常用的是

A.
系统脱敏
B.
厌恶治疗
C.
患者中心
D.
催眠治疗
E.
自由联想
【单选题】

乙公司向甲公司发出要约,旋又发出一份“要约作废”的函件。甲公司的董事长助理收到乙公司的要约之后,很快又收到了“要约作废”的函件,但其忘记将“要约作废”的函件交给董事长。第三天甲公司董事长发函给乙公司,提出只要将交货日期推迟两个星期,其他条件都可接受。后甲、乙公司未能缔约,双方缔约没能成功的原因是什么?(       )

A.

 要约已被撤回

B.

 要约已被撤销

C.

 甲公司对要约作了实质性改变

D.

 甲公司承诺超过了有效期间

【单选题】

Passage1

Do who choose to go on exotic,far-flung holidays deserve free health advice before they travel?And even if they pay,who ensures that they get good,up-to-date information?Who,for that matter,should collect that information in the first place?For a variety of reasons,travel medicine in Britain is a responsibility nobody wants.As a result,many travellers go abroad prepared to avoid serious disease.

Why is travel medicine so unloved?Partly there's an identity problem. Because it takes an interest in anything that impinges on the health of travelers ,this emerging medical specialism invariably cuts across the traditional disciplines. It delves into everything from seasickness,jet lag and the hazards of camels to malaria and plague. But travel medicine has a more serious obstacle to overcome. Travel clinics are meant to tell people how to avoid ending up dead or in a hospital when they come home,but it is notoriously difficult to get anybody pay out money for keeping people healthy.

Travel medicine has also been colonized by commercial interests; the vast majority of travel clinics in Britain are run by airlines or travel companies. And while travel concerns are happy to sell profitable injections, they may be less keen to spread bad news about travellers' diarrhea in Turkey, or to take time to spell out preventive measures travellers could take."The NHS finds it difficult to define travellers' health,"says Ron Behrens,"the only NHS consultant in travel and director of the travel clinic of the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London."Should it come within the NHS or should it be paid for?"It's Gary area, and opinion is spilt. No one seems to have any responsibility for defining its role,"he says.

To compound its low status in the medical hierarchy, travel medicine has to rely on statistics that are patchy at best. In most cases we just don't know how many Britons contract diseases when abroad. And even if a disease linked to travel there is rarely any information about where those afflicted went, what they are, how they behaved, or which vaccinations they had. This shortage of hard facts and figures makes it difficult to give detailed advice to people, information that might even save their lives.

A recent leader in British Medical Journal argued."Travel medicine will emerge as credible disciplines only if the risks encountered by travellers and the relative benefits of public health interventions are well defined in terms of their relative occurrence, distribution and control."Exactly how much money is wasted by poor travel advice. The real figure is anybody's guess, but it could easily run into millions. Behrens gives one example. Britain spends more than £ 1 million each year just on cholera vaccines that often don't work and so give people a false sense of security."Information on the prevention and treatment of all forms of diarrhea would be a better priority," he says.


The phrase "delves into" in Paragraph 2 can be replaced by_______.

A.
refrains from
B.
holds back
C.
digs into
D.
worries about