While testing capacity is gaining ground, the road ahead remains long. The health system has never had to manage testing at the scale needed to control this pandemic, and doing so may require extraordinary solutions, expecting that the gap between testing need and testing capacity will only be wider as states reopen.
Health experts have called for testing well beyond current levels. But increasing capacity will be a challenge at every step in the process.
Step 1
A sample, such as saliva (唾液) or sample from the nose or throat, is collected.
Challenge:
Supplies such as swabs (拭子) and vials (瓶子) are specialized and controlled. This makes the supply chain weak to demand increases. In March, testing was held up by a shortage of swabs.
Step 2
The sample is placed in a solution and delivered to lab technologist.
Challenge:
Workforce is already an issue at many labs Hiring is difficult, as only certified technologists are trained to handle the patient samples.
Step 3
Chemical liquids called reagents (试剂) extract and strengthen the virus’s genetic material.
Challenge:
Labs have faced reagent shortages, and industry groups have already noted that a rise in testing demand has the potential to use up supplies.
Step 4
Machines detect the presence of the virus in a sample.
Challenge:
Dozens of test systems have been FDA approved, but many labs lack the up-front money to invest in the technology and growing up.
1.Which organ will we fail to get a testing sample from?
A.The mouth. B.The throat. C.The nose. D.The ears.
2.What is the challenge for Step 4?
A.Supply shortage. B.Workforce in demand.
C.Genetic substances. D.Financial support in advance.
3.What does the passage intend to tell us about?
A.Ways to fight pandemic. B.Testing capacity for viruses.
C.Roadblocks to testing goals. D.Efforts to test viruses.
假如你是李华,你的英国朋友Henry发邮件向你询问有关中国抗疫专家钟南山的一些情况,请你回复邮件。内容包括:
1. 人物简介;
2. 抗疫贡献;
3. ……
注意:1. 词数100左右。
2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
参考词汇:冠状病毒 COVID-19,epicenter (疫情)中心
Dear Henry,
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Best wishes!
Yours,
Li Hua
阅读下面短文,根据其内容写一篇60词左右的内容概要。
Why do we have deserts today? Deserts have not always been here. Most deserts that we have today were once green lands full of plant life. One of today’s biggest deserts is in North Africa. However, in the 1st century BC farms in North Africa grew corn and wheat to make bread for the whole city of Rome. How did this area become desert?
Both weather and people can help form a desert. Hot weather or very little rain makes the land so dry that nothing can grow. While in some regions, the increase in desert areas is occurring largely as a result of a trend toward drier climatic conditions.
Continued gradual global warming has produced an increase in aridity (干旱) for some areas over the past few thousand years. The process may be sped up in the following decades if global warming resulting from air pollution seriously increases.
The primary reason for desert formation is human activities, though. If people cut down or burn trees and plants to make land clear for farming, the wind can blow the soil away and turn the dry land into sand. Another big problem is farming on land that is not very good. This poor land can very quickly turn into desert, if it is farmed too much. One of the biggest causes, however, is when people take their animals to the same fields to feed over and over, and the fields finally lose all their nutrition. Because of these problems, deserts are slowly taking over green land in many parts of the world, including China.
However, we can fight the growing deserts! In some parts of China people are working to prevent desert from expanding. In Xinjiang, for example, some farmers are trying new scientific farming methods. These methods make it possible to use less land for crops, so farmers then can plant trees on the rest of their land!
One Xinjiang farmer used only HALF of his fields to grow the SAME amount of crops as last year. On the other half of his land, he planted fruit trees. The work of people like this is helping to fight the world’s growing deserts.
Recently, a Philadelphia teen has been a hot topic in the US. Having always been hard-working in studying, Richard Jenkins has now ________ a full ride (奖学金) to Harvard University.
However, life is not always ________ for Jenkins. When his mother couldn’t ________ a motel room, they would stay in shelters. ________ by his situation, he would lie to classmates about where he lived. Jenkins knew there was one thing that could give him a better life: ________. Then, he attended a program called Mighty Writers, which teaches Philadelphia kids to think and write clearly.
“I realized I’ve got to try my best ________ I can’t have my future kids ________ through what I’m undergoing now,” Jenkins thought to himself. Though being ________, he decided to ________ academics and kept working hard on it. His ________ in school would pay off in a major way.
Jenkins applied to Harvard in his junior year of high school. He said he was ________ of his acceptance on a class trip to Paris. He was so ________ that he threw his cellphone. Jenkins was not only ________ to the university, but also got full ________! He recently went back to Mighty Writers to ________ his good news to the program’s director.
Jenkins was quite ________ of his mother, and says to the reports that he doesn’t like to talk about his past ________ in homeless shelter. However, he does say his ________ as a child gave him the ________ and desire to get into Harvard and he was ________ in the end.
1.A.demanded B.received C.achieved D.represented
2.A.easy B.practical C.ordinary D.impressive
3.A.build B.afford C.buy D.exchange
4.A.Amazed B.Discouraged C.Encouraged D.Embarrassed
5.A.creativity B.profession C.education D.development
6.A.though B.because C.if D.when
7.A.going B.looking C.putting D.coming
8.A.poor B.hungry C.ashamed D.regretful
9.A.live on B.call up C.focus on D.bring up
10.A.feeling B.idea C.nature D.effort
11.A.informed B.warned C.made D.reminded
12.A.moved B.confused C.excited D.satisfied
13.A.taken B.changed C.devoted D.admitted
14.A.salary B.scholarship C.life D.mark
15.A.show B.spread C.deliver D.supply
16.A.proud B.protective C.fond D.sure
17.A.hiding B.existing C.moving D.living
18.A.knowledge B.suffering C.experiences D.happiness
19.A.drive B.ability C.imagination D.influence
20.A.praised B.convinced C.inspired D.rewarded
1.
When you go to and get up is the key to having a good sleep. Once you are used to your body’s biological (生物钟) clocks, your body will know when to sleep and when to be awake.
2.. As soon as your eyes open, light shoots down and into the brain’s clock. There it starts the production of the hormones (荷尔蒙) that are about growth, reproduction, eating, sleeping, thinking, remembering even how you feel from minute to minute. Sunlight makes your brain awake, and wakes up your body’s biological clock. Then your body has a clear understanding that at midnight it should be asleep and at noon it should be awake. 3..
When you are sleepy, your eyes are tired and you can’t hear what people are saying to you.
Don’t stay in bed when you’re awake. 4. Being up increases your sleep drive which just could make you sleepy enough to actually fall asleep when you return to bed.
Before going to bed, you need to relax yourself and turn into the person who can sleep from the person who can do everything.
Try not to stay up late on Friday and Saturday nights and sleep in on Saturday and Sunday mornings, which is enough to destroy your biological clock. 5.. And you will not be the happy person as you expect when Monday morning comes.
A.Ways to get a good quality sleep
B.Ways to relax yourself before sleeping
C.A good night’s sleep in fact starts in the morning
D.You’d better get up at the same time every morning
E.You’d better get up or go to read a book in the living room
F.Even if you go to bed early on Sunday nights you will not be ready to sleep
G.If you wake up at a different time every day your biological clock will be disordered
Robots often star in popular science fiction movies as the bad guys that take over the world and control mankind. But with the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic (新型冠状病毒), robots are increasingly being employed as helpers, performing often dull, difficult and dangerous tasks and thus reducing humans’ exposure (暴露) to COVID-19.
Across the world, robotics companies are teaming with health care providers and government officials to develop technological solutions for dealing with the global health crisis. In China, robots have rolled down streets spraying disinfectant. In at least one hospital in South Korea, robots are being used to check patients’ temperatures and give out hand wash.
In the United States, two of the major ways in which robotic technology is being used are to disinfect hospital rooms and to act as telemedicine portal (远程医疗门户), allowing doctors and health care workers to communicate via video conference directly with patients without unnecessarily exposing themselves to the virus.
In Boston, doctors, researchers and robotics engineers have cooperated to bring a friendly, dog-like robot named Spot into Brigham and Women’s Hospital, allowing doctors to interact with COVID-19 patients via telemedicine. What sets Spot apart is its four-legged design, which allows the robot to move about easily in different settings, such as the tent set up outside the hospital.
In March, researchers began developing and testing the robot’s design to enable Spot to interact with patients, thus reducing the exposure of frontline health care workers to the virus. In the place of head, Spot has an iPad fixed to stand, allowing doctors to conduct telemedicine sessions with their patients.
Researchers are working to increase the robots’ diagnostic (诊断) abilities, enabling it to test the patient’s temperature and measure his or her respiratory rate.
Dr. Peter Chai, an emergency medicine physician, predicts that hospitals will continue to find ways to use robots even after the coronavirus pandemic is over, whether it may be through delivering supplies to rooms or seeing patients with other contagious (传染性的) diseases.
1.In China, robots are used to ________.
A.rid the streets of the virus B.hand out hand wash
C.communicate with patients D.measure the patients’ temperature
2.What does the underlined word “sessions” in Para. 5 mean?
A.greetings B.decisions C.experiments D.conferences
3.What can we infer from Dr. Chai’s prediction in the last paragraph?
A.More robots will be used to fight the virus.
B.New robots will be invented to fight the virus.
C.Robots will still play a part in medical treatment.
D.Robots will be invented to deliver medicines to patients.
4.Which can be the best title for the passage?
A.Robots, deliverers of COVID-19 B.Robots, fighters against COVID-19
C.Robots, helpers in fighting COVID-19 D.Robots, pioneers in fighting COVID-19