問題詳情

請依下文回答第 13 題至第 17 題        Tono, a city of nearly 32,000 in rural northern Japan, lost its last obstetrician five years ago. It has beendesperately seeking for a replacement, but up to now there has been no success. In the meantime, the city hasadopted a high-tech measure that may portend the future of child delivery in Japan: pregnant women are examinedremotely by obstetricians using real-time data transmitted to the doctors’ cellphones. When the doctors judge thata patient is about to go into labor, the woman heads for the nearest city with a maternity ward—usually Kamaishi,which can be reached by a 40-minute drive on a winding, mountainous, one-lane road to the east.        Yukie Kikuchi, the city’s sole practicing midwife, said she was pleased and relieved now that obstetricianscould remotely examine pregnant women here. Pregnancy examinations are usually done at the patient’s home orat a local clinic. During the examination, a machine hooked to the patient’s stomach records the baby’s heartbeatand sends the information over a cellular network to the cellphone of Dr. Toshihiro Ogasawara at KamaishiHospital.         Besides Tono, three other cities adopted the system last fall, said Mr. Kikuchi, the city’s health official.
13 Why do pregnant women in Tono go to Kamaishi for child delivery?
(A)Kamaishi Hospital is well-known in the country.
(B)Kamaishi Hospital has better gynecologists.
(C)Hospitals in Tono do not have any midwife to deliver the baby.
(D)Hospitals in Tono do not have obstetricians or maternity wards.

參考答案

答案:D
難度:適中0.607843
統計:A(1),B(13),C(2),D(31),E(0)

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