新编大学英语阅读部分第一册Unit2-1(在线收听

Unit 2 Psychology in Our Daily Life

In-Class Reading

Is There a Doctor in the Body?

I. Word List
Directions: Memorize the words and phrases before class. You will benefit from your effort when you get the passage from your teacher and read it in class.


Proper Names

Romania
n. 罗马尼亚 (欧洲巴尔干半岛东北部国家)

New Words

bleed*
v. lose blood 出血
e.g. He'd been wounded in the arm and he was bleeding heavily.

bleeding
adj. 出血的,流血的

capsule *
n. 胶囊

harmless *
adj. not having any bad effects, especially on people's health
e.g. The experiment was harmless to the animals.

heal *
v. make or become well again, especially after a cut or other injury
e.g. It took three months for my arm to heal properly.

likely *
adj. expected to happen; probable 可能的
e.g. I ) It's quite likely that we'll be in Spain this time next year.
II) Once people have seen that something actually works, they are much more likely to accept change.

placebo
n. (复-bos或-boes) 安慰剂

prescribe *
v. (of a doctor) say what (medical treatment) someone should have 为......开药方,嘱咐(疗法)
e.g. What treatment did the doctor prescribe?

prescription *
n. 药方
e.g. A doctor writes the prescription and a chemist (药剂师) makes it up for you.

rate *
n. a level of speed with which something happens or changes, or the number of times it happens or changes, within a particular period 率,比率
e.g. birth rate, success rate, growth rate

react *
v. behave differently or change as a result of something; respond 反应
e.g. The judge reacted angrily to the suggestion that it hadn't been a fair trial.

reaction *
n. 反应
e.g. What was her reaction when you told her the news?

reality *
n. 现实
e.g. The reality is that they are poor.

reassurance *
n. help or advice that makes you feel less worried or frightened about a problem 安慰,保证
e.g. Despite her father's reassurance she was still frightened of the dark.

relationship *
n. 关系
e.g. This relationship between them seemed strange to him.

relief *
n. a feeling of comfort when something frightening, worrying, or painful has not happened or has ended (痛苦等)减轻,解除
e.g. To our great relief, the children all arrived home safely.

role *
n. the way in which someone or something is involved in an activity or situation, and how much influence they have on it 角色,作用
e.g. Until now scientists had very little clear evidence about the drug's role in preventing more serious effects of infection.

seasickness *
n. 晕船

swear *
v. (swore, sworn) say or promise very seriously or definitely 发誓,诅咒
e.g. I don't know anything about what happened, I swear.

treatment*
n. a method that is intended to cure an injury or illness 治疗方法
e.g. Heat treatment certainly helped my knee.

tribal *
adj. of a tribe or tribes 部落的
e.g. tribal dress, tribal leaders

ulcer
n. 溃疡

Is There a Doctor in the Body?

1 When you go to the doctor, you like to come away with a prescription. It makes you feel better to know you will get some medicine. But the doctor knows that medicine is not always needed. Sometimes all a sick person needs is some reassurance that all will be well. In such cases the doctor may prescribe a placebo.
2 A placebo is a sugar pill, a harmless shot, or an empty capsule. Even though they have no medicine in them, these things seem to make people well. The patient thinks it is medicine and begins to get better. How does this happen?
3 The study of the placebo opens up new knowledge about the way the human body can heal itself. It is as if there was a doctor in each of us. The "doctor" will heal the body for us if we let it.
4 But it is not yet known just how the placebo works to heal the body. Some people say it works because the human mind fools itself. These people say that if the mind is fooled into thinking it got medicine, then it will act as if it did, and the body will feel better.
5 Other people say this is not so. They say that the placebo makes the wish to get better become reality. The placebo will not work if the patient knows it is a placebo. This shows that the body is not fooled by it. It seems that if patients think they have been given medicine, they will have hope. They feel that they are getting some help. This gives them a stronger will to get better, and that is what helps to heal them.
6 Placebos do not always work. The success of this treatment seems to rest a lot with the relationship between the patient and the doctor. If the patient has a lot of trust in the doctor and if the doctor really wants to help the patient, then the placebo is more likely to work. So in a way, the doctor is the most powerful placebo of all.
7 An example of the doctor's role in making the placebo work can be seen in this study. Some patients with bleeding ulcers were put in two groups. The first group were told by a doctor that they had been given a new drug which, it was hoped, would give them some relief. The second group were told by a nurse that they had been given a new drug but that not much was known about how it would work. As a result, 70 percent of the people in the first group got much better. Only 25 percent of the people in the second group got better. And both groups had in fact been given the same thing-a placebo.
8 The placebo has been found to work with a lot of different cases. It helps such things as seasickness, coughs, colds, and even pain after an operation. And there was an experiment done to see if a placebo could help old people stay healthy and live longer.
9 The test was done in Romania with 150 people over the age of 60. They were put in three groups with 50 people in each group. The first group were given nothing at all. The second group were given a placebo. The third group were given a real drug and told that it would help with the problems of old age. (In fact, it was not a drug for old age at all.) The three groups were studied for many years. The first group showed no changes from the way old people in that village had always been. The second group (with the placebo) had much better health and a lower death rate. The third group (with the real drug) showed much the same results as the group that took the placebo.
10 A placebo can also have bad effects. If patients expect a bad reaction to medicine, then they will also show a bad reaction to the placebo. This would seem to show that a lot of how you react to medicine is in your mind rather than in your body. Some doctors still think that if the placebo can have bad effects it should never be used. They think there is still not enough known about it.
11 And yet, the use of the placebo has been well known for hundreds of years in other countries. Tribal doctors in some African countries have known for a long time that patients will get better if they think they are going to. Many of the "treatments" they use do not seem able to make a sick person better, and yet such treatments work.
12 The strange power of the placebo does seem to suggest that the human mind is stronger than we think it is. There are people who say you can heal your body by using your mind. And the interesting thing is that even people who swear this is not possible have been healed by a placebo. (839 words)

Time taken: ____ minutes


Phrases and Expressions

as a result
because of something that has happened
e.g. He slipped and broke his leg. As a result, he will have to be away from school for two or three weeks.

fool somebody into doing something
trick somebody into doing something
e.g. Tim was fooled into believing that he'd won a lot of money.

in a way
partly, to some degree 就某种意义来说,在某种程度上
e.g. In a way, her health is much improved, but she is still not really well.

open up
develop or make something available 展示,揭示
e.g. This research opens up the possibility of being able to find a cure for the disease.

react to
respond to 对......做出反应
e.g. Do children react to kind treatment by becoming more self-confident?

rest with
lie with 取决于,得靠
e.g. Whether the talks are successful or not rests with a small number of men.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/engread/25913.html