高级口译0609听力原文汇总合集(6)

2010-09-06 00:00:00来源:网络

  凌凌教你学口语:每日一句系列
  备战口译:原创双语时事汇总
  2010秋季上海口译考试报名通知

  上海中高级口译考试分为笔试和口试,在笔试考试通过后会颁发笔试证书,通过一次笔试可以获得四次口试的机会。中高级口译的笔试和口试虽然是分开进行的,但其笔试的证书在社会上却有很高的认可度。

  高级口译0609听力原文汇总合集(6)

  This is the end of SECTION 1, listening test.

  SECTION 4: LISTENING TEST

  Part A: Note-taking And Gap-filling

  Directions: In this part of the test you will hear a short talk. You will hear the talk ONLY ONCE. While listening to the talk, you may take notes on the important points so that you can have enough information to complete a gap-filling task on a separate ANSWER BOOKLET. You will not get your ANSWER BOOKLET until after you have listened to the talk.

  Now listen to the talk carefully.

  Well, my topic today is the doctor-patient relationship. If you come in, and the doctor doesn’t shake your hand, the doctor doesn’t meet your eye, the doctor is looking at the clock, the telephone is ringing, and the secretary is coming in, this is not a doctor you can have a healing relationship with. Can you say to him, “Doctor, put that phone down; you’re looking at me”? It’s not likely that you’ll choose such doctors.

  All of us may have to see the doctor sometimes. We know the symptoms and what calls itself “the best medical system in the world”. The receptionist is more interested in our insurance than in our pain. We can often feel that our examination, such as it is, is being conducted by that blinking machinery. What we’re missing is the educated touch. The cocked head of a real doctor listening to your heartbeat, listening for your spirit. Without that human recognition, as one patient said, I am nothing but my illness. I am talking about one of the critical relationships in life—a relationship which many people would say is beyond saving. This doctor-patient relationship… Can this thing be saved? Is this the last requiem for a dying breed? Or should we call young doctors to a new standard? Can it be done?

  The answer is categorically yes, because it must. Because otherwise, we can’t get medicine. Because medicine is not merely science. Medicine is not only curing, but it’s also healing. And healing requires the type of medicine that we’re espousing. And if that is lost, medicine becomes a technology, and is de-professionalized. And that is what we’re aiming to halt. In part, the crisis in medicine began with doctors distancing themselves from patients.

  The more critical work of a doctor happens not from lab tests, not from anything that you can measure with a needle or a number, but in the taking of the human history, which is, of course, one of the patient’s biggest…I mean, we’re all longing for somebody to take our history and see it whole—mind, body, spirit—well or ill.

  Listening is the most important and most difficult single transaction. Most difficult, because it takes time. There is no substitute. And the moment you start by not giving time, you cannot listen. And listening is not merely with the ears: Listening is with your total being. And the fact of the matter is, the studies carried out in Britain and other places, show that 75% of all the valuable information that leads to correct diagnosis comes from the history. Another 10% comes from the physical examination. 10% comes from simple laboratory tests, and 5% comes from all the complex technology that you’re launched against, and sometimes for, the patient. So listening is vital, because listening is not merely listening, but to establish a relationship.

  But some doctors think listening is inefficient, because if you get all the information in this least costly way, immediately you don’t have to report to numerous specialists, and you don’t have to engage in complex and costly technologies. You don’t launch drugs that create adverse reactions and require hospitalization, and a whole array of consequentialities ensue.

  So the doctors seize the patient for 10 minutes. The doctor focuses on only one thing—the chief complaint. And the chief complaint may have to nothing do with what brings the patient to the doctor. This type of doctoring is essential, because 80% of all the problems that come to doctors are trivial. The problem is the doctor isn’t there, because the doctor doesn’t want to listen. He’s afraid to listen. He doesn’t know how to listen. He hasn’t been trained how to listen. There is no premium on listening. There’s no reward for listening. Even so, the doctor-patient relationship is not beyond saving. I am an incorrigible optimist, because time and time again, the American people, if they begin to understand what good health is all about, what is good health? And good health begins first and foremost with caring. If you don’t care for a patient, be somebody else, but don’t be a doctor.

  本文选自新东方口译名师裴晓栋的blog,blog链接地址:http://blog.hjenglish.com/peixiaodong

  相关链接:
  2010秋季口译备考胜经:口译笔记1
  2010秋季口译备考胜经:口译笔记2
  2010秋季口译备考胜经:口译笔记3
  名师:如何有效对付口译科技类阅读

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