语料库-国产精选一区-提供经典范文,国产精选视频,文案句子,国产精选第一页,常用文书,您的写作得力助手

2023年英語四級聽力的練習:VOA慢速4.14

雕龍文庫 分享 時間: 收藏本文

2023年英語四級聽力的練習:VOA慢速4.14

  下面是4月14日VOA慢速聽力的英文原文,這是一篇科學資訊報道,供考生參考。

  From VOA Learning English, this is Science in the News.

  Im Anna Matteo.

  And Im Christopher Cruise.

  This week we talk about smoking -- a preventable cause of cancer.

  This year, the United States marked the 50th anniversary of the governments first report on smoking and health. The then-Surgeon General -- Luther Terry -- wrote that first report. It linked cigarettes to lung cancer and heart disease. The year was 1964. At that time, more than 40 percent of Americans smoked. Today, about 18 percent are smokers.

  Anti-smoking measures save lives in the U.S.

  The report led to anti-smoking measures, including a requirement to place warnings on cigarette packages. The government also banned television and radio advertisements for cigarettes.

  American medical researchers say anti-smoking measures have saved 8 million American lives since 1964. But cigarette smoking still kills about 443,000 Americans every year.

  Dr. Joanna Cohen heads the Global Tobacco Initiative at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. She says the surgeon generals report has had a real effect on Americans.

  And it really led to a reduction in use and a great increase in knowledge of the harmful effects of tobacco products.

  Smoking

  ?In the United States, laws now restrict tobacco use, including the sale of cigarettes to individuals under the age of 18. Laws also protect non-smokers from breathing smoke-filled air. Many cities have banned smoking in public spaces like restaurants, bars and even outdoor areas. Anyone visiting New York Citys famous Central Park may receive a fine for lighting up a cigarette.

  The medical community has repeatedly reported reasons why smokers should stop. A new report by the acting surgeon general says recent findings show that smoking is even worse than people believe it to be. Boris Lushniak says smoking is linked to colon, rectal and liver cancers.

  Today we know that smoking is a cause of diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and poor response to treatment of arthritis, erectile dysfunction, an increased risk of tuberculosis, disease and death. Were adding colon, rectal and liver cancer to the long list of cancers caused by smoking.

  Dr. Lushniak says smoking weakens the bodys natural defenses against disease, making it easier for smokers to get sick. The new report also lists the risks for people who do not smoke, but who are surrounded by what is called secondhand smoke.

  The research shows the damaging effects on unborn children. Pregnant women who smoke are putting their unborn children at risk for both mental and physical developmental problems. For example, their facial features may not form correctly. The dangerous chemicals in tobacco smoke can also affect the brain of an unborn child.

  Number of Smokers is Expected to Grow in Asia Pacific

  Health experts have been warning about links between smoking and disease for years. The World Health Organization says tobacco use causes almost 6 million deaths worldwide every year. The WHO predicts the yearly number will increase to 8 million by 2030.

  Tobacco use is the leading risk factor for causing cancer. The WHO says that tobacco is responsible for over 20 percent of all cancer deaths and 70 percent of all lung cancer deaths. Smoking also causes respiratory diseases, which affect the nose and breathing passages to the surface of the lungs. Respiratory diseases include asthma, bronchitis and emphysema. Smoking can also cause cardiovascular diseases, like heart disease and stroke.

  People who smoke are not only hurting themselves. They also can harm non-smokers. The WHO officials estimate that secondhand smoke kills 600,000 people each year. It says more than half of the worlds children regularly breathe secondhand smoke.

  Even after all the warnings, the WHO says over 1 billion people still smoke. The number of smokers is expected to grow, although rates have decreased in the higher income nations.

  A man smokes in front of a no smoking sign in Shanghai, Jan. 10, 2023.

  WHO officials say almost 80 percent of all smokers live in low- and middle-income countries. In 2010, the organization said nations in the Western Pacific Ocean have the highest smoking rates. One-third of all smokers live in East Asia and the Pacific. The area has the largest number of male smokers. It also has the fastest-growing number of female and child smokers. Every day, diseases linked to tobacco use kill more than 3,000 people in the area.

  Scientists have found more than 4,000 chemicals in cigarette smoke. At least 250 of them are known to be harmful. And more than 50 are suspected to cause cancer. They include arsenic, which can be used to kill plants and small animals. Cigarette smoke also contains formaldehyde -- a liquid used to protect the look of dead bodies.

  As bad as those chemicals are, nicotine may be the most threatening of them all. Nicotine is a poison found in tobacco. It gives smokers pleasure and keeps them coming back for more.

  The body grows to depend on nicotine. Studies have found that nicotine can be as difficult to resist as alcohol or the drug cocaine. Experts say nicotine can kill a person when taken in large amounts. It does this by stopping the muscles used for breathing.

  So is there any way to smoke without harming your health? The majority of available research suggests not. Smoking even a few cigarettes can be dangerous. But many of the harmful effects of smoking are reversible. They can be undone. That is why most medical experts advise people to stop smoking forever.

  The American Cancer Society says blood pressure returns to normal 20 minutes after the last cigarette. Carbon monoxide levels in the blood return to normal after eight hours. The chance of heart attack decreases after one day. After one year, the risk of heart disease for a non-smoker is half that of a smoker.

  E-Cigarette is Still Unproven as Nicotine Replacement

  There are many products available to help people reduce their dependence on cigarettes. Nicotine replacement products provide the body with small amounts of the chemical through forms other than cigarettes. The amounts of nicotine are slowly reduced over time.

  One device that has become popular among people trying to quit smoking is the electronic cigarette, known as an e-cigarette. E-cigarettes are battery-operated devices that look like a real cigarette. The smoker places a regulated amount of nicotine into the device. As they smoke, a watery substance called vapor releases from the device. Because the vapor does not release the same harmful chemicals as cigarette smoke, the device is permitted in places that normally ban smoking.

  However, there are campaigns to ban e-cigarettes and change legislation linked to the device. In February, the European Parliament approved new rules on e-cigarettes that member nations must approve. The European Commission says the rules will go into effect in May of 2023. They include banning advertisements for e-cigarettes, placing health warnings similar to those on cigarettes on the packages, and limiting the amount of nicotine that could be placed in the devices.

  The New York Times newspaper reports that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is also looking into new rules and regulations on the devices. However, the agency says there is not enough evidence or research to say e-cigarettes are good or bad for your health. Nor will the agency agree with the debate that e-cigarettes increase young peoples desire to try other tobacco related products.

  E-cigarette, an electronic substitute, slightly longer than a normal cigarette.

  Researchers at the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California studied the link between the e-cigarette and real tobacco use. Stan Glantz is the director of the center. He says there is evidence the device helps a small number of adults stop smoking. But, he says, it is not the same with younger people. Mr. Glantz and other researchers completed a study with nearly 76,000 Korean teenagers. They found that the e-cigarette did not help the young Koreans quit smoking, but instead made them heavier smokers.

  The study that was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health says the young teenagers are being targeted in advertisements. Many of the ads are linked to sex and independence. They also claim the device will help you quit smoking. But Mr. Glantz says it is not likely they will quit smoking.

  We have the kind of Wild West marketing that we did in the bad old days for cigarettes. And the kids are clearly responding to that. And youth use of e-cigarettes in Korea is going up very rapidly just as it did here in the United States.

  American regulators report the number of young students using e-cigarettes increased two times from 2011 to 2023. Now 1.7 million students use the devices.

  Cigarette companies manufacture e-cigarettes. There are efforts in some U.S. cities to ban the devices. Many people believe that, until there are new rules, use of e-cigarettes will lead many people to become long-term smokers. Health experts say the best way to quit smoking is never to start.

  This Science in the News was written by June Simms and Kim Varzi.

  Im Anna Matteo.

  And Im Christopher Cruise.

  Join us again next week for more news about science on the Voice of America.

  

  下面是4月14日VOA慢速聽力的英文原文,這是一篇科學資訊報道,供考生參考。

  From VOA Learning English, this is Science in the News.

  Im Anna Matteo.

  And Im Christopher Cruise.

  This week we talk about smoking -- a preventable cause of cancer.

  This year, the United States marked the 50th anniversary of the governments first report on smoking and health. The then-Surgeon General -- Luther Terry -- wrote that first report. It linked cigarettes to lung cancer and heart disease. The year was 1964. At that time, more than 40 percent of Americans smoked. Today, about 18 percent are smokers.

  Anti-smoking measures save lives in the U.S.

  The report led to anti-smoking measures, including a requirement to place warnings on cigarette packages. The government also banned television and radio advertisements for cigarettes.

  American medical researchers say anti-smoking measures have saved 8 million American lives since 1964. But cigarette smoking still kills about 443,000 Americans every year.

  Dr. Joanna Cohen heads the Global Tobacco Initiative at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. She says the surgeon generals report has had a real effect on Americans.

  And it really led to a reduction in use and a great increase in knowledge of the harmful effects of tobacco products.

  Smoking

  ?In the United States, laws now restrict tobacco use, including the sale of cigarettes to individuals under the age of 18. Laws also protect non-smokers from breathing smoke-filled air. Many cities have banned smoking in public spaces like restaurants, bars and even outdoor areas. Anyone visiting New York Citys famous Central Park may receive a fine for lighting up a cigarette.

  The medical community has repeatedly reported reasons why smokers should stop. A new report by the acting surgeon general says recent findings show that smoking is even worse than people believe it to be. Boris Lushniak says smoking is linked to colon, rectal and liver cancers.

  Today we know that smoking is a cause of diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and poor response to treatment of arthritis, erectile dysfunction, an increased risk of tuberculosis, disease and death. Were adding colon, rectal and liver cancer to the long list of cancers caused by smoking.

  Dr. Lushniak says smoking weakens the bodys natural defenses against disease, making it easier for smokers to get sick. The new report also lists the risks for people who do not smoke, but who are surrounded by what is called secondhand smoke.

  The research shows the damaging effects on unborn children. Pregnant women who smoke are putting their unborn children at risk for both mental and physical developmental problems. For example, their facial features may not form correctly. The dangerous chemicals in tobacco smoke can also affect the brain of an unborn child.

  Number of Smokers is Expected to Grow in Asia Pacific

  Health experts have been warning about links between smoking and disease for years. The World Health Organization says tobacco use causes almost 6 million deaths worldwide every year. The WHO predicts the yearly number will increase to 8 million by 2030.

  Tobacco use is the leading risk factor for causing cancer. The WHO says that tobacco is responsible for over 20 percent of all cancer deaths and 70 percent of all lung cancer deaths. Smoking also causes respiratory diseases, which affect the nose and breathing passages to the surface of the lungs. Respiratory diseases include asthma, bronchitis and emphysema. Smoking can also cause cardiovascular diseases, like heart disease and stroke.

  People who smoke are not only hurting themselves. They also can harm non-smokers. The WHO officials estimate that secondhand smoke kills 600,000 people each year. It says more than half of the worlds children regularly breathe secondhand smoke.

  Even after all the warnings, the WHO says over 1 billion people still smoke. The number of smokers is expected to grow, although rates have decreased in the higher income nations.

  A man smokes in front of a no smoking sign in Shanghai, Jan. 10, 2023.

  WHO officials say almost 80 percent of all smokers live in low- and middle-income countries. In 2010, the organization said nations in the Western Pacific Ocean have the highest smoking rates. One-third of all smokers live in East Asia and the Pacific. The area has the largest number of male smokers. It also has the fastest-growing number of female and child smokers. Every day, diseases linked to tobacco use kill more than 3,000 people in the area.

  Scientists have found more than 4,000 chemicals in cigarette smoke. At least 250 of them are known to be harmful. And more than 50 are suspected to cause cancer. They include arsenic, which can be used to kill plants and small animals. Cigarette smoke also contains formaldehyde -- a liquid used to protect the look of dead bodies.

  As bad as those chemicals are, nicotine may be the most threatening of them all. Nicotine is a poison found in tobacco. It gives smokers pleasure and keeps them coming back for more.

  The body grows to depend on nicotine. Studies have found that nicotine can be as difficult to resist as alcohol or the drug cocaine. Experts say nicotine can kill a person when taken in large amounts. It does this by stopping the muscles used for breathing.

  So is there any way to smoke without harming your health? The majority of available research suggests not. Smoking even a few cigarettes can be dangerous. But many of the harmful effects of smoking are reversible. They can be undone. That is why most medical experts advise people to stop smoking forever.

  The American Cancer Society says blood pressure returns to normal 20 minutes after the last cigarette. Carbon monoxide levels in the blood return to normal after eight hours. The chance of heart attack decreases after one day. After one year, the risk of heart disease for a non-smoker is half that of a smoker.

  E-Cigarette is Still Unproven as Nicotine Replacement

  There are many products available to help people reduce their dependence on cigarettes. Nicotine replacement products provide the body with small amounts of the chemical through forms other than cigarettes. The amounts of nicotine are slowly reduced over time.

  One device that has become popular among people trying to quit smoking is the electronic cigarette, known as an e-cigarette. E-cigarettes are battery-operated devices that look like a real cigarette. The smoker places a regulated amount of nicotine into the device. As they smoke, a watery substance called vapor releases from the device. Because the vapor does not release the same harmful chemicals as cigarette smoke, the device is permitted in places that normally ban smoking.

  However, there are campaigns to ban e-cigarettes and change legislation linked to the device. In February, the European Parliament approved new rules on e-cigarettes that member nations must approve. The European Commission says the rules will go into effect in May of 2023. They include banning advertisements for e-cigarettes, placing health warnings similar to those on cigarettes on the packages, and limiting the amount of nicotine that could be placed in the devices.

  The New York Times newspaper reports that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is also looking into new rules and regulations on the devices. However, the agency says there is not enough evidence or research to say e-cigarettes are good or bad for your health. Nor will the agency agree with the debate that e-cigarettes increase young peoples desire to try other tobacco related products.

  E-cigarette, an electronic substitute, slightly longer than a normal cigarette.

  Researchers at the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California studied the link between the e-cigarette and real tobacco use. Stan Glantz is the director of the center. He says there is evidence the device helps a small number of adults stop smoking. But, he says, it is not the same with younger people. Mr. Glantz and other researchers completed a study with nearly 76,000 Korean teenagers. They found that the e-cigarette did not help the young Koreans quit smoking, but instead made them heavier smokers.

  The study that was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health says the young teenagers are being targeted in advertisements. Many of the ads are linked to sex and independence. They also claim the device will help you quit smoking. But Mr. Glantz says it is not likely they will quit smoking.

  We have the kind of Wild West marketing that we did in the bad old days for cigarettes. And the kids are clearly responding to that. And youth use of e-cigarettes in Korea is going up very rapidly just as it did here in the United States.

  American regulators report the number of young students using e-cigarettes increased two times from 2011 to 2023. Now 1.7 million students use the devices.

  Cigarette companies manufacture e-cigarettes. There are efforts in some U.S. cities to ban the devices. Many people believe that, until there are new rules, use of e-cigarettes will lead many people to become long-term smokers. Health experts say the best way to quit smoking is never to start.

  This Science in the News was written by June Simms and Kim Varzi.

  Im Anna Matteo.

  And Im Christopher Cruise.

  Join us again next week for more news about science on the Voice of America.

  

主站蜘蛛池模板: 缓蚀除垢剂_循环水阻垢剂_反渗透锅炉阻垢剂_有机硫化物-郑州威大水处理材料有限公司 | 乐考网-银行从业_基金从业资格考试_初级/中级会计报名时间_中级经济师 | 常州企业采购平台_常州MRO采购公司_常州米孚机电设备有限公司 | 成都租车_成都租车公司_成都租车网_众行宝 | 粘度计维修,在线粘度计,二手博勒飞粘度计维修|收购-天津市祥睿科技有限公司 | 棕刚玉-白刚玉厂家价格_巩义市东翔净水材料厂 | EFM 022静电场测试仪-套帽式风量计-静电平板监测器-上海民仪电子有限公司 | 钢木实验台-全钢实验台-化验室通风柜-实验室装修厂家-杭州博扬实验设备 | 青州开防盗门锁-配汽车芯片钥匙-保险箱钥匙-吉祥修锁店 | 土壤有机碳消解器-石油|表层油类分析采水器-青岛溯源环保设备有限公司 | 铸钢件厂家-铸钢齿轮-减速机厂家-淄博凯振机械有限公司 | 肉嫩度仪-凝胶测试仪-国产质构仪-气味分析仪-上海保圣实业发展有限公司|总部 | 广州迈驰新GMP兽药包装机首页_药品包装机_中药散剂包装机 | 雷冲击高压发生器-水内冷直流高压发生器-串联谐振分压器-武汉特高压电力科技有限公司 | 橡胶弹簧|复合弹簧|橡胶球|振动筛配件-新乡市永鑫橡胶厂 | 岛津二手液相色谱仪,岛津10A液相,安捷伦二手液相,安捷伦1100液相-杭州森尼欧科学仪器有限公司 | 二维运动混料机,加热型混料机,干粉混料机-南京腾阳干燥设备厂 | 北京模型公司-工业模型-地产模型-施工模型-北京渝峰时代沙盘模型制作公司 | 佛山市钱丰金属不锈钢蜂窝板定制厂家|不锈钢装饰线条|不锈钢屏风| 电梯装饰板|不锈钢蜂窝板不锈钢工艺板材厂家佛山市钱丰金属制品有限公司 | 振动筛,震动筛,圆形振动筛,振动筛价格,振动筛厂家-新乡巨宝机电 蒸汽热收缩机_蒸汽发生器_塑封机_包膜机_封切收缩机_热收缩包装机_真空机_全自动打包机_捆扎机_封箱机-东莞市中堡智能科技有限公司 | 聚合氯化铝_喷雾聚氯化铝_聚合氯化铝铁厂家_郑州亿升化工有限公司 | 萃取箱-萃取槽-PVC萃取箱厂家-混合澄清槽- 杭州南方化工设备 | 包装设计公司,产品包装设计|包装制作,包装盒定制厂家-汇包装【官方网站】 | 红酒招商加盟-葡萄酒加盟-进口红酒代理-青岛枞木酒业有限公司 | 宝宝药浴-产后药浴-药浴加盟-艾裕-专注母婴调养泡浴 | 电气控制系统集成商-PLC控制柜变频控制柜-非标自动化定制-电气控制柜成套-NIDEC CT变频器-威肯自动化控制 | 小区健身器材_户外健身器材_室外健身器材_公园健身路径-沧州浩然体育器材有限公司 | 广州监控安装公司_远程监控_安防弱电工程_无线wifi覆盖_泉威安防科技 | Trimos测长机_测高仪_TESA_mahr,WYLER水平仪,PWB对刀仪-德瑞华测量技术(苏州)有限公司 | 北钻固控设备|石油钻采设备-石油固控设备厂家 | 【直乐】河北石家庄脊柱侧弯医院_治疗椎间盘突出哪家医院好_骨科脊柱外科专业医院_治疗抽动症/关节病骨伤权威医院|排行-直乐矫形中医医院 | 房车价格_依维柯/大通/东风御风/福特全顺/江铃图片_云梯搬家车厂家-程力专用汽车股份有限公司 | 振动筛-交叉筛-螺旋筛-滚轴筛-正弦筛-方形摇摆筛「新乡振动筛厂家」 | 全自动过滤器_反冲洗过滤器_自清洗过滤器_量子除垢环_量子环除垢_量子除垢 - 安士睿(北京)过滤设备有限公司 | 丁基胶边来料加工,医用活塞边角料加工,异戊二烯橡胶边来料加工-河北盛唐橡胶制品有限公司 | 北京成考网-北京成人高考网 | 发电机组|柴油发电机组-批发,上柴,玉柴,潍柴,康明斯柴油发电机厂家直销 | 预制直埋蒸汽保温管-直埋管道-聚氨酯发泡保温管厂家 - 唐山市吉祥保温工贸有限公司 | 槽钢冲孔机,槽钢三面冲,带钢冲孔机-山东兴田阳光智能装备股份有限公司 | 美名宝起名网-在线宝宝、公司、起名平台 | 杭州荣奥家具有限公司-浙江办公家具,杭州办公家具厂 |