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I recently took care of a 50-year-old man who had been admitted to the hospital short of breath. During his monthlong stay he was seen by a hematologist, an endocrinologist, a kidney specialist, a podiatrist, two cardiologists, a cardiac electrophysiologist, an infectious-diseases specialist, a pulmonologist, an ear-nose-throat specialist, a urologist, a gastroenterologist, a neurologist, a nutritionist, a general surgeon, a thoracic surgeon and a pain specialist. He underwent 12 procedures, including cardiac catheterization, a pacemaker implant and a hone-marrow biopsy (to work-up chronic anemia). Despite this wearying schedule, he maintained an upbeat manner, walking the corridors daily with as sistance to chat with nurses and physician assistants. When he was discharged, follow-up visits were scheduled for him with seven specialists. This man's case, in which expert consultations sprouted with little rhyme, reason or coordination, reinforced a lesson I have learned many times since entering practice: In our health care system, where doctors are paid piecework for their services, if you have a slew of physicians and a willing patient, almost any sort of terrible excess can occur. Though accurate data is lacking, the overuse of services in health care probably cost hundreds of billions of dollars last year, out of the more than $ 2 trillion that Americans spent on health. Are we getting our money's worth? Not according to the usual measures of public health. The United States ranks 45th in life expectancy, behind Bosnia and Jordan near last, compared with other developed countries, in infant mortality and in last place, according to the Commonwealth Fund, a health-care research group, among major industrialized countries in health-care quality, access and efficiency. And in the United States, regions that spend the most on health care appear to have higher mortality rates than regions that spend the least, perhaps because of increased hospitalization rates that result in more life-threatening errors and infections. It has been estimated that if the entire country spent the same as the lowest spending regions, the Medicare program alone could save about $ 40 billion a year. Overutilization is driven by many factors—'defensive' medicine by doctors trying to avoid lawsuits patients' demands a pervading belief among doctors and patients that newer, more expensive technology is better. The most important factor, however, may be the perverse financial incentives of our current system. Overeonsultation and overtesting have now become facts of the medical profession. The culture in practice is to grab patients and generate volume. 'Medicine has become like everything else,' a doctor told me recently. 'Everything moves because of money.' Consider medical imaging. According to a federal commission, from 1999 to 2004 the growth in the volume of imaging services per Medicare patient far outstripped the growth' of all other physician services. In 2004, the cost of imaging services was close to $100 billion, or an average of roughly $350 per person in the United States. Not long ago, I visited a friend—a cardiologist in his late 30s—at his office on Long Island to ask him about imaging in private practices. 'When I started in practice, I wanted to do the right thing,' he told me matter-of-factly. 'A young woman would come in with palpitations. I'd tell her she was fine. But then I realized that she'd just go down the street to another physician and he'd order all the tests anyway: echocardiogram, stress test, Holter monitor—stuff she didn't really need. Then she'd go around and tell her friends what a great doctor— a thorough doctor—the other cardiologist was. 'I tried to practice ethical medicine, but it didn't help. It didn't pay, both from a financial and a reputation standpoint. ' Last year, Congress approve
A.
There are a lot of excessive services in American hospitals.
B.
Doctors are over-loaded in American hospitals.
C.
American hospitals are suffering great losses because of poor health conditions.
D.
The health-care service in the American hospitals is systematic and patient-oriented.
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【简答题】化学突触由 、 、 三部分组成。
【单选题】部分废料可通过收集、分类、加工、供应等环节转化成新的产品,重新投入到生产或消费中,这一过程称为(    )。
A.
废弃物流    
B.
回收物流    
C.
呆滞物料    
D.
陈旧物料
E.
绿色物流
【单选题】部分废料可通过收集、分类、加工、供应等环节转化成新的产品,重新投入到生产或消费中,这一过程成为()。
A.
回收物流
B.
销售物流
C.
生产物流
D.
废弃物流
【简答题】运动训练对肌纤维类型组成有什么影响?
【单选题】部分废料可通过收集、分类、加工、供应等环节转化成新的产品,重新投入到生产或消费中,这一过程称为:( )
A.
回收物流
B.
销售物流
C.
生产物流
D.
废弃物流
【单选题】裸子植物茎维管束的木质部中输导组织是( )
A.
管胞
B.
木薄壁细胞
C.
木纤维
D.
射线
E.
射线细胞
【简答题】()是用一种协议传输另一种协议的技术。
【简答题】运动训练对肌纤维类型的组成有什么影响?
【单选题】糖原合成中糖链延长时葡萄糖的供体是
A.
葡萄糖
B.
6-磷酸葡萄糖
C.
1-磷酸葡萄糖
D.
UDP葡萄糖
E.
ADP葡萄糖
【单选题】计算机网络的基本分类方法主要有两种:一种是根据网络所使用的传输技术;另一种是根据
A.
四络协议
B.
网络操作系统类型
C.
覆盖范围与规模
D.
网络服务器类型与规模
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