梅奥的人群关系理论的基本观点包括( )。A.认为金钱是刺激积极性的惟一动力 B.生产

题型:多项选择题

问题:

梅奥的人群关系理论的基本观点包括( )。

A.认为金钱是刺激积极性的惟一动力

B.生产效率的提高和降低,主要取决于职工的工作情绪

C.在企业中并存着“正式组织”和“非正式组织”

D.生产效率主要决定于工作方法和工作条件

E.提出了新型领导和民主管理的必要性

考点:注册物业管理师物业管理综合能力物业管理师物业管理综合能力
题型:多项选择题

遵守医学伦理道德,尊重患者的知情(),为患者保守医疗秘密和健康隐私,维护患者合法权益。

A.选择权

B.同意权

C.隐私权

D.同意权和隐私权

E.以上都是

题型:多项选择题

为确保实验结果的科学性,除变量外影响实验的其他因素应[ ]

A.相同

B.不同

C.相似

D.随意

题型:多项选择题

患儿男性,4岁,因“咳嗽20日,加重10余日”来诊。患儿20天前出现喷嚏、鼻塞、流涕、咳嗽等症状,在家自服小儿感冒颗粒等中西药物,症状未得缓解,且呈进行性加重,伴发热,经服用中药汤剂3天后热退,但咳嗽反而加重,渐呈阵发性痉挛样咳嗽,昼轻夜重,伴吸气样回吼,咳必作呕,咳甚涕泪交流,小便失禁,吐出痰涎及食物后,痉咳方得以暂时缓解,目睛红赤。查体:体温36.9℃,脉搏106次/分,呼吸26次/分。意识清,精神差,咳嗽时患儿表情痛苦,颈静脉怒张,眼结膜出血,眼睑附近可见针尖样出血点,咽部充血,双肺呼吸音粗糙,未及干湿性啰音。血常规:白细胞19.25×10/L,淋巴细胞0.73,单核细胞0.03,中性粒细胞0.21。舌质红,苔黄腻,脉滑数。

此患儿的诊断是()

A.感冒

B.肺炎喘嗽

C.咳嗽

D.呕吐

E.百日咳

F.哮喘

题型:多项选择题

患者,男性,22岁。因剧烈运动后,突然出现左胸痛,深吸气时胸痛明显加重,伴有气促。体格检查:气管向右偏移,左胸廓稍膨隆,呼吸音减弱。下列诊断哪项是对的()

A.哮喘

B.心源性呼吸困难

C.心绞痛

D.左侧自发性气胸

E.以上都不是

题型:多项选择题

In 1880, Sir Joshua Waddilove, a Victorian philanthropist, founded Provident Financial to provide affordable loans to working-class families in and around Bradford, in northern England. This month his company, now one of Britain’s leading providers of "home credit"— small, short-term, unsecured loans—began the nationwide rollout of Vanquis, a credit card aimed at people that mainstream lenders shun. The card offers up to £ 200 ($ 380) of credit, at a price: for the riskiest customers, the annual interest rate will be 69%.

Provident says that the typical interest rate is closer to 50% and that it charges no fees for late payments or breaching credit limits. Still, that is triple the rate on regular credit cards and far above the 30% charged by store cards. And the Vanquis card is being launched just when Britain’s politicians and media are full of worry about soaring consumer debt. Last month, a man took his own life after running up debts of £ 130000 on 22 different credit cards.

Credit cards for "sub-prime" borrowers, as the industry delicately calls those with poor credit records, are new in Britain but have been common in America for a while. Lenders began issuing them when the prime market became saturated, prompting them to look for new sources of profit. Even in America, the sub-prime market has plenty of room for growth. David Robertson of the Nilson Report, a trade magazine, reckons that outstanding sub-prime credit-card debt accounts for only 3% of the $ 597 billion that Americans owe on plastic. The sub-prime sector grew by 7.9% last year, compared with only 2.6% for the industry as a whole.

You might wonder, though, how companies can make money from lending to customers they know to be bad risks—or at any rate, how they can do it legitimately. Whereas delinquencies in the credit-card industry as a whole are around 4%-5% , those in the sub-prime market are almost twice as high, and can reach 15% in hard times.

Obviously, issuers charge higher interest rates to compensate them for the higher risk of not being repaid. And all across the credit-card industry, the assessment and pricing of risks has been getting more and more refined, thanks largely to advances in technology and data processing. Companies also use sophisticated computer programs to track slower payment or other signs of increased risk. Sub-prime issuers pay as much attention to collecting debt as to managing risk; they impose extra charges, such as application fees; and they cap their potential losses by lending only small amounts ($ 500 is a typical credit limit).All this is easier to describe than to do, especially when the economy slows. After the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000, several sub-prime credit-card providers failed. Now there are only around 100, of which nine issue credit cards. Survivors such as Metris and Providian, two of the bigger sub-prime card companies, have become choosier about their customers’ credit histories. As the economy recovered, so did lenders’ fortunes. Fitch, a rating agency, says that the proportion of sub-prime credit-card borrowers who are more than 60 days in arrears (a good predictor of eventual default) is the lowest since November 2001. But with American interest rates rising again, some worry about another squeeze. As Fitch’s Michael Dean points out, sub-prime borrowers tend to have not just higher-rate credit cards, but dearer auto loans and variable-rate mortgages as well. That makes a risky business even riskier.

Vanquis is different from regular cards in that()

A. it charges its users no fees at all

B. it leads to a decrease in consumer debt

C. it leads to an increase in consumer debt

D. it charges its users higher interest rates

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