If you’re in a hospital and your doctor wants to monitor you without being in the room, there’s an app for that. There are also

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问题     If you’re in a hospital and your doctor wants to monitor you without being in the room, there’s an app for that. There are also wireless pacemakers(起搏器)that allow doctors to keep track of your health over the Internet, as well as all types of sensors that check your vital signs and can be transmitted to a smart phone or laptop. The use of wireless-enabled devices is happening in hospitals across the country and, according to a report out this week by ABI Research, "this multibillion-dollar market is poised for even faster growth as more and more medical equipment is shipped WiFi-enabled. "

    Depending on wireless-enabled health-care services could prove to be useful for several reasons. The biggest is that it allows doctors and hospitals to deal with the crush of aging patients who require regular checkups. For example, if a doctor can check your vitals via his BlackBerry, he avoids the time and cost of bringing you in to do the exact same thing. The idea is that these small changes will make health care more efficient and overall service better and even cheaper. Of course, we can’t forget the financial benefit to this sector, which grew more than 60 percent over the past 12 months in both wireless local area network and Wi-Fi real-time location system deployments. Not bad for a relatively nascent(新生的)market.
    But there are some concerns about getting wired in the name of health. Like what happens if the equipment goes kaput(故障的)or misreads signs of a heart attack? ABI Research principal analyst, Jonathan Collins, told me that the adoption of wireless by the health-care sector will focus on noncritical applications for now. "It will measure things that are routinely monitored, where a change in a patient’s status won’t result in a life-or-death situation, but rather if a patient has an uptick in blood sugar, a doctor can call them up and see how they’re feeling. "
    The Food and Drug Administration and Federal Communications Commission are scheduled to meet next month to discuss how to promote investment and innovation in health technology so it sounds like there’s little that will get in the way of this boom. If all of this sounds scary, consider it a normal reaction. Even a few patients who are on board and happy about this tech shift were freaked out once upon a time. Carol Kasy-janski, who wore a traditional pacemaker for 20 years for a heart condition, became the first American to be fitted with a wireless pacemaker last year. At the time, Kasyjanski told Reuters that her initial "fears have slowly been replaced by a sense of relief, knowing that her heart is under constant surveillance(监视). "  
According to Jonathan Collins, the wireless-enabled devices in health-care sector will

选项 A、almost replace the traditional devices
B、focus on applications of significant diagnosis
C、be mainly used for routine examinations
D、center on monitoring changes of patients’ blood sugar

答案C

解析 事实细节题。第三段中Jonathan Collins提到目前医疗领域的无线设备主要用于非关键用途,检测项目会是常规监测项目。由此可知[C]项正确。文中体现了医疗领域的无线设备正在不断发展,但是没有说将会几乎取代传统设备,故[A]项错误。原文以病人的血糖上升,为一个假设的例子,说明这种新设备还需要医生们的细心监督,不是说这些设备主要用于检测血糖变化,故[D]项错误。[B]项说主要用于重大诊断,与原文意义相反,故错误。
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