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Worried about prescription drugs? How to weigh

2022-08-02 00:02:52 问答库 阅读 168 次

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Worried about prescription drugs? How to weigh your risk?
When the pain reliever Vioxx was withdrawn from the worldwide market last September after the announcement that it increased patients" risk of heart attacks and strokes, millions panicked. Suddenly, ads for the drug were replaced with ads looking for Vioxx "victims". Not only did patients stop taking Vioxx hut, doctors say, many people stopped taking their other medicines, too--sometimes putting their health at serious risk. The sometimes-sensationalized headlines didn"t help. People wondered. Should I trust my doctors? Could what I thought would help me actually kill me? Is the drug safety system broken?
Americans have somehow come to believe they should get the best medical care, with the lat- est remedies with no side effects. But there is no drug that doesn"t have side effects. Peter Con", head of worldwide research and development for drug manufacturer Pfizer says, "As a society we expect medicine to be perfect. There is no such thing. There is always a risk."
How You Can Make Informed Decisions
Since there is no,. such thing as a pill that is completely safe, including aspirin, consumers have to accept the dichotomy (一分为二) that the same medicines that extend and enhance our lives may hurt us; some of them may merely have minor side effects, while others are able to cause death. So how should you and your doctor proceed?
1. Weigh the risks and benefits of any drug. As a smart consumer you must decide whether a drug is "safe enough" for you. The greater the benefit, the more risk you may be willing to take. If your illness is mild and not very bothersome, you may decide that any risk is too big and opt against taking any medications at all. On the contrary, if your illness is serious or potentially life threatening, you may even be willing to try an experimental drug with greater risk for serious side effects.
Zena McAdams, 59, a regional clergyman in Macon, Georgia, has lived with a condition that causes chronic pain for many years. For a long time she took OTC ibuprofen (布洛芬,一种镇痛非处方药), "I mean lots of it," she says. In the spring of 2001, her doctor prescribed Vioxx. Taken only once a day, it was "remarkable," she says. "I took it every day till it was taken off the market."
After speaking to her doctor, she switched to Celebrex last October. It was also effective in controlling the aches and pains associated with her condition--until she heard concerns that it, too, had serious potential side effects. She talked to her doctor, weighed the risks versus the benefits and decided that her quality of life was most important. "There is always that nasty feeling about safety," she says, "but there is no reason to think that I have any heart problems. The benefits at this point in my life certainly outweigh the risks. The drug works. It eases the pain."
2. Be especially cautions about new drugs. New drugs are inherently risky. So if you"re taking one, monitor yourself carefully. Have your eating and digestive habits changed? Are you feeling unusually tired or agitated? Have your breathing patterns or skin color changed? If so, call your doctor immediately, who may tell you to stop taking the drug. How does a consumer know that a drug is new? Ask your doctor or pharmacist (药剂师)?
If you have a choice between two or more equally effective drugs, choose the one with a longer track record of safety. If you are taking a drug in the same class as one that has been recalled, it is careful to ask your doctor if that drug places you at greater risks.
3. Know ff you"re in a high-risk group. Although scientists still don"t know precisely why, certain individuals have bad reactions to a drug or to a particular dose of a drug,
A.Y
B.N
C.NG

参考答案

正确答案:A
解析:分析对比题目和原文,可以看出原文是双重否定表肯定,题目与其内容相同,不过是用词和结构不同而已,所以答案为Y。

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