题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
提问人:网友z*****n 发布时间:2022年4月18日 23:52
[单项选择题]

男性患者,55岁。某晚聚餐后,凌晨时被发现猝死在床上,脐周皮肤青紫色。此例的死因最可能是

A.心肌梗死

B.脑血管意外

C.消化性溃疡穿孔

D.急性出血坏死型胰腺炎

E.暴发性菌痢

参考答案
十点题库官方参考答案 (由十点题库聘请的专业题库老师提供的解答)
更多“男性患者,55岁。某晚聚餐后,凌晨时被发现猝死在床上,脐周皮”相关的问题
以下因素:①粗骨料强度低②砂子用量过大③粉料含量过多④沥青针入度偏大⑤矿料级配采用了间断级配⑥级配偏细其中导致沥青混合料配合比设计的马歇尔稳定度偏低的原因有()项。
A.3 B.4 C.5 D.6
点击查看答案
某工程低温热水地板辐射采暖系统盘管工作压力0.54MPa,按《GB50242-2002建筑给水排水及采暖工程施工质量验收规范》要求进行水压试验,在试验压力达到稳压时间后,压力变为0.77MPa,该检验项目可判定为()。
A . A、合格
B . B、不合格
C . C、数据无效
D . D、没有规定
点击查看答案

某个类中的成员变量只能被同一个包中的类访问,下面的哪些修饰符可以获得所要的访问控制   

A . publicB . protectedC . 没有修饰符D . private
点击查看答案
下列有关胰岛素的保存方法描述不正确的是()
A.胰岛素最适宜的保存温度是2-80C
B.应置冰箱冷藏室内存放
C.未开启的胰岛素可以保存2年
D.已开启的胰岛素可以保存3个月
E.乘飞机旅行时,最好放行李箱内托运
点击查看答案
每个投资管理人员每年接受合规培训的时间不得少于24小时。( )
点击查看答案
JB/T4730.4-2005标准规定:交流线圈退磁时,将需退磁的工件从通电的磁化线圈中缓慢抽出,直至工件离开线圈()以上时,再切断电流。
A.0.25m B.l.0m C.0.5m D.与距离无关
点击查看答案

Questions 26 to 35 are based on the following passage.

Just off the coast of Southern California sits Santa Cruz Island, where a magical creature called the island fox    26   . A decade ago, this island’s ecosystem was in    27   . Wild pigs attracted golden eagles from the mainland, and those flying    28    crashed the fox population. So the Nature Conservancy launched a    29    war against the pigs, complete with helicopters and sharp shooters.

And it worked. Today, federal agencies are pulling the island fox from the Endangered Species List. It’s the fastest-ever recovery of a mammal, joining peers like the Louisiana black bear as glowing successes in the history of the Endangered Species Act.

But the recovery of Santa Cruz Island isn’t just about the fox. The Nature Conservancy has    30    war on a multitude of invasive species here, from sheep to plants to the    31    Argentine ant. “Our philosophy with the island has always been, ‘OK,    32    the threats and let the island go back to what it was,’” says ecologist Christina Boser. And it appears to be working. Native plants are coming back, and the fox once again bounds about carefree.

But keeping those foxes from harm will occupy Boser and her colleagues for years to come. You see, humans are still allowed on Santa Cruz Island, and they bring dogs. So Boser has to vaccinate her foxes against various diseases. “We’re obligated to keep a pulse on the population for at least five years after the foxes are delisted,” says Boser. That includes tagging the foxes and    33    their numbers to ensure nothing goes wrong.

This is the story of the little fox that has come back, and the people who have    34   their lives to protecting it. This is the story of wildlife conservation in the age of mass    35   .

A)aggressive                      I)hinders

B)chaos                          J)mammal

C) configuration                   K) monitoring

D)declared                         L)predators

E)dedicated                         M)remove

F)dwells                           N) tempt

G)extinction                       O)underlying

H) fierce


Section B

Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.

                  Do Parents Invade Children’s Privacy When They Post Photos Online?


[A] When Katlyn Burbidge’s son was 6 years old, he was performing some ridiculous song and dance typical of a first-grader. But after she snapped a photo and started using her phone, he asked her a serious question:“Are you going to post that online?” She laughed and answered, “Yes, I think I will.” What he said next stopped her. “Can you not?”

[B] That’s when it dawned on her: She had been posting photos of him online without asking his permission. “We’re big advocates of bodily autonomy and not forcing him to hug or kiss people unless he wants to, but it never occurred to me that I should ask his permission to post photos of him online,” says Burbidge, a mom of two in Wakefield, Massachusetts. “Now when I post a photo of him online, I show him the photo and get his okay.”

[C] When her 8-month-old is 3 or 4 years old, she plans to start asking him in an age-appropriate way, “Do you want other people to see this?” That’s precisely the approach that two researchers advocated before a room of pediatricians (儿科医生) last week at the American Academy of Pediatrics meeting, when they discussed the 21st century challenge of “sharenting,” a new term for parents’ online sharing about their children. “As advocates of children’s rights, we believe that children should have a voice about what information is shared about them if possible,” says Stacey Steinberg, a legal skills professor at the University of Florida Levin College of Law in Gainesville.

[D] Whether it’s ensuring that your child isn’t bullied over something you post, that their identity isn’t digitally “kidnapped”, or that their photos don’t end up on a half dozen child pornography (色情) sites, as one Australian mom discovered, parents and pediatricians are increasingly aware of the importance of protecting children’s digital presence. Steinberg and Bahareh Keith, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Florida College of Medicine, say most children will likely never experience problems related to what their parents share, but a tension still exists between parents’ rights to share their experiences and their children’s rights to privacy.

[E] “We’re in no way trying to silence parents’ voices,” Steinberg says. “At the same time, we recognize that children might have an interest in entering adulthood free to create their own digital footprint.” They cited a study presented earlier this year of 249 pairs of parents and their children in which twice as many children as parents wanted rules on what parents could share. “The parents said, ‘We don’t need rules—we’re fine,’ and the children said, ‘Our parents need rules,’” Keith says. “The children wanted autonomy about this issue and were worried about their parents sharing information about them.”

[F] Although the American Academy of Pediatrics offers guidelines recommending that parents model appropriate social media use for their children, it does not explicitly discuss oversharing by parents. “I think this is a very legitimate concern, and I appreciate their drawing our attention to it,” David Hill, a father of five, says. He sees a role for pediatricians to talk with parents about this, but believes the messaging must extend far beyond pediatricians’ offices. “I look forward to seeing researchers expand our understanding of the issue so we can translate it into effective education and policy,” he says.

[G] There’s been little research on the topic, Steinberg wrote in a law article about this issue. While states could pass laws related to sharing information about children online, Steinberg feels parents themselves are generally best suited to make these decisions for their families. “While we didn’t want to create any unnecessary panic, we did find some concerns that were troublesome, and we thought that parents or at least physicians should be aware of those potential risks,” Steinberg says. They include photos repurposed for inappropriate or illegal means, identity theft, embarrassment, bullying by peers or digital kidnapping.

[H] But that’s the negative side, with risks that must be balanced against the benefits of sharing. Steinberg pointed out that parental sharing on social media helps build communities, connect spread-out families, provide support and raise awareness around important social issues for which parents might be their children’s only voice.

[I] A C.S. Mott survey found among the 56 percent of mothers and 34 percent of fathers who discussed parenting on social media, 72 percent of them said sharing made them feel less alone, and nearly as many said sharing helped them worry less and gave them advice from other parents. The most common topics they discussed included kids’ sleep, nutrition, discipline, behavior problems and day care and preschool.

[J] “There’s this peer-to-peer nature of health care these days with a profound opportunity for parents to learn helpful tips, safety and prevention efforts, pro-vaccine messages and all kinds of other messages from other parents in their social communities,” says Wendy Sue Swanson, a pediatrician and executive director of digital health at Seattle Children’s Hospital, where she blogs about her own parenting journey to help other parents. “They’re getting nurtured by people they’ve already selected that they trust,” she says.

[K] “How do we weigh the risks, how do we think about the benefits, and how do we alleviate the risks?” she says. “Those are the questions we need to ask ourselves, and everyone can have a different answer.”

[L] Some parents find the best route for them is not to share at all. Bridget O’Hanlon and her husband, who live in Cleveland, decided before their daughter was born that they would not post her photos online. When a few family members did post pictures, O’Hanlon and her husband made their wishes clear. “It’s been hard not to share pictures of her because people always want to know how babies and toddlers (学走路的孩子) are doing and to see pictures, but we made the decision to have social media while she did not,” O’Hanlon said. Similarly, Alison Jamison of New York decided with her husband that their child had a right to their own online identity. They did use an invitation-only photo sharing platform so that friends and family, including those far away, could see the photos, but they stood firm, simply refusing to put their child’s photos on other social media platforms.

[M] “For most families, it’s a journey. Sometimes it goes wrong, but most of the time it doesn’t,” says Swanson, who recommends starting to ask children permission to post narratives or photos around ages 6 to 8. “We’ll learn more and more what our tolerance is. We can ask our kids to help us learn as a society what’s okay and what’s not.”

[N] Indeed, that learning process goes both ways. Bria Dunham, a mother in Somerville, Massachusetts, was so excited to watch a moment of brotherly bonding while her first-grader and baby took a bath together that she snapped a few photos. But when she considered posting them online, she took the perspective of her son: How would he feel if his classmates’ parents saw photos of him chest-up in the bathtub? “It m

点击查看答案
TIA的可能病因及发病机制包括()
A.微栓塞 B.血管痉挛 C.血液成分改变 D.血流动力学改变 E.血管闭塞
点击查看答案
印刷机的种类很多,平版印刷机是按下列哪个标准来进行分类的?()
A.按照版面型式分
B.按照纸张的尺寸规格分
C.按照印刷色数分
D.按照印刷幅面分
点击查看答案
维生素K3又名
A.亚硫酸氢钠甲萘酚
B.亚硫酸氢钠甲萘醌
C.亚硫酸氢钠甲苯酚
D.亚硫酸氢钠乙萘酚
E.亚硫酸氢钠乙萘醌
点击查看答案
在多元线性回归模型中,若要选择最优自变量集合,依据的下列( )指标进行判断。
点击查看答案
2009年,很多高中毕业生由于对大学毕业以后的就业前景感到担忧,放弃了参加高考,对此,正确的观点是( )。
A.这些人不去上大学一定是错误的
B.这些人本来就不应该去上大学
C.如果大学毕业时找不到工作,确实不该去上大学
D.上大学的收益并不仅仅发生在刚毕业时,而是长期的,如果仅仅根据大学毕业时能否找到工作来做出决策,可能会是错误的
点击查看答案
印度“狼孩”的例子表明()。
A.早期学习经验的缺失直接阻碍了心理的正常发展 B.早期学习经验的缺失直接改变了心理的正常发展 C.后天的学习确实比先天的条件更有重要 D.先天的条件再好也没有后天的学习有用
点击查看答案
下列对于厉兑穴定位正确的是:()
A.在足第2趾末节外侧,距趾甲角0.1寸 B.在足第2趾末节内侧,距趾甲角0.1寸 C.在足第3趾末节外侧,距趾甲角0.1寸 D.在足第3趾末节内侧,距趾甲角0.1寸 E.以上均不是
点击查看答案
In studying the places of articulation, is classified as an ALVEOLAR.
In studying the places of articulation, is classified as an ALVEOLAR.
点击查看答案
客服
TOP