题目内容

The purpose of the requirements definition phase is to produce a clear, complete, consistent, and testable (71) of the technical requirements for the software product. During the requirements definition phase, the requirements definition team uses an iterative process to expand a broad statement of the system requirements into a complete and detailed specification of each function that the software must perform and each (72) that it must meet. The starting point is usually a set of high-level requirements from the (73) that describe the project or problem. In either case, the requirements definition team formulates an overall concept for the system and the defines (74) showing how the system will be operated, publishes the system and operation concept documents, and conducts a system concept review (SCR). Following the SCR, the team derives (75) requirements for the system from the highlevel requirements and the system operations concept. Using structured or object-oriented analysis,the team specifies the software functions and algorithms needed to satisfy each detailed requirements.

A. detailed
B. outlined
C. total
D. complete

查看答案
更多问题

女性患者,60岁,糖尿病病史15年,长期口服优降糖(格列本脲)治疗,现诊断为糖尿病肾病,血肌酐升高,迭尿毒症期。首选何种治疗

A. 维持原治疗
B. 改用其他磺脲类降糖药
C. 改用胰岛素
D. 双胍类药物
E. 胰岛素增敏剂

下述关于ARDS的临床特点和实验室检查,哪一项是正确的

A. 呼吸窘迫的特点为呼吸浅快,频率大于 28/min
B. 早期体征为双侧肺底湿啰音
C. 因本病的主要病理变化为肺水肿,故不会出现管状呼吸音
D. X线胸片符合肺水肿,不会出现肺间质纤维化
E. 肺动脉平均压力小于12cmH2O

血友病()

A. 血浆凝血酶原时间延长
B. 血小板计数减少、血块退缩不良
C. 血小板计数正常、毛细血管脆性试验阳性
D. 3P试验(+)
E. ATPP延长

Almost everyone agrees that America’s health-care system has the incentives all wrong. Under the present system, doctors and hospitals get paid for doing more, even if added tests, operations and procedures have little chance of improving patients’ health. So what happens when someone proposes that we alter the incentives to reward better care, not more care Well, Rep. Paul Ryan and Republicans found out. No surprise: Democrats slammed them for "ending Medicare as we know it. "This predictably partisan reaction preying upon the anxieties of retirees—must depress anyone who cares about the country’s future. It is only a slight exaggeration to say that unless we end Medicare "as we know it," America "as we know it" will end. Spiraling health spending is the crux of our federal budget problem. In 1965—the year Congress created Medicare and Medicaid—health spending was 2.6 percent of the budget. In 2010, it was 26.5 percent. The Obama administration estimates it will be 30.3 percent in 2016. By contrast, defense spending is about 20 percent; scientific research and development is 4 percent.Uncontrolled health spending isn’t simply crowding out other government programs; it’s also dampening overall living standards. Health economists Michael Chernew, Richard Hirth and David Cutler recently reported that higher health costs consumed 35.7 percent of the increase in per capita income from 1999 to 2007. They also project that, under reasonable assumptions, it could absorb half or more of the gain between now and 2083.Ryan proposes to change that. Beginning in 2022, new (not existing) Medicare beneficiaries would receive a voucher, valued initially at about $ 8,000. The theory is simple. Suddenly empowered, Medicare beneficiaries would shop for lowest-cost, highest-quality insurance plans providing a required package of benefits. The health-care delivery system would be forced to restructure by reducing costs and improving quality. Doctors, hospitals and clinics would form networks; there would be more "coordination" of care, helped by more investment in information technology; better use of deductibles and co-payments would reduce unnecessary trips to doctors’ offices or clinics.It’s shock therapy. Would it work No one knows, but two things are clear. First, as Medicare goes, so goes the entire health-care system. Medicare is the nation’s largest insurance program, with 48 million recipients and spending last year of $ 520 billion. Second, few doubt that today’s health-care system has much waste: medical care that does no good.Under Ryan’s plan, incentives would shift. Medicare would no longer be an open ATM; the vouchers would limit total spending. Providers would face pressures to do more with less; there would certainly be charges that essential care was being denied. The Obama administration argues that better results can be achieved by modifying incentives within the existing system. Perhaps. But history suggests skepticism. It’s Ryan’s radicalism vs. President Obama’s remedy policy. Which is realistic and which is wishful thinking Burdened by runaway spending, Medicare "as we know it" is going to end. The only questions are when and on whose terms. It can be inferred from the passage that Ryan’s plan()

A. would be readily accepted by the Obama administration
B. is nothing but wishful thinking and thus is unrealistic
C. arises from dissatisfaction with Obama’s health-care reform
D. ignores the essential health-care for old beneficiaries

答案查题题库