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Section 2 Question 5:
The following extract is token from a text that explores different individuals' experiences of illness.
The patient has undergone major abdominal surgery. If there is a distinction between experiencing and remembering, it is lost on doctors. When the chief resident arrived, I repeated my request for pain killers. He said pain was an important indicator of what was going on inside me and they needed to know when and where I hurt. He could apply a local pain killer where the tube was inserted, which would help with the pain of the insertion; for the rest, he would give me something to relax me that would also erase my memory of the pain. I agreed to all this - again, I seemed to have no choice - but thought, 'Great, I'll suffer but I won't remember it and that's supposed to make it okay?'
(这一场景和Section 2 Question 4一样)
The doctor could have alleviated the patient's concerns by
A emphasising his qualifications and experience.
B reassuring the patient that his concerns were unwarranted.
C imparting less information so as not to confuse the patient.
D acknowledging the patient's concerns and exploring them in more detail.
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