问题 单项选择题

某医院手术室近期手术后感染率增高,护理部召集所有手术科室开会进行原因分析,把可能造成手术感染的原因归纳为制度、环境、敷料器械、医护人员、病人准备等几大类,针对这几大类原因找出中原因,再进一步找出使感染率增高的小原因几十条,将其绘制一个鱼刺图,并针对一系列原因采取改进措施。此护理质量评价使用的是( )

A.分层法
B.调查表法
C.排列图法
D.因果分析图
E.控制图

答案

参考答案:D

解析: 本题是考查学生对常用的质量评价统计方法的理解应用情况,常用的质量评价统计方法有五种:分层法、调查表法、排列图法、因果分析图、控制图。这所医院针对手术室近期手术感染率增高这一大原因,进行了全面分析,她们首先以结果——感染率增高为出发点,首先查找出可能使感染率增高的大原因,然后再从大原因中找出中原因,再进一步找出使感染率增高的小原因,这种方法叫因果分析图又称特性因素图、树枝图、鱼刺图。它是整理、分析影响质量的各种原因及各种原因之间关系的一种工具。因此D为正确选项。

选择题
多项选择题

At a recent Internet culture conference at the MIT in Cambridge, a local ice-cream shop offered to make a custom flavor for the event. After some discussion, the organizers decided that it should be vanilla ice cream mixed with Nerds candies, "because the Internet is primarily white and nerdy," explains Chris Csikszentmihalyi, who directs the MIT Center for Future Civic Media. While a joke, the ice-cream flavor was also a serious commentary on the digital divide that has grown between those who created the Internet--mostly affluent, white, male programmers--and the billions of people with whom they share little in common.
There’s a push among development specialists to provide more people with Internet connections and the assumption that these new Web citizens can then reap the same benefits as communities who’ve long been online. This may not be the case, however. While few people dispute the value of getting the world online, many Internet experts say that current Web content has little relevance and thus little appeal to those whose lifestyle is worlds away from programmers in the United States and Europe. If the majority of the world is to use the Web for more than just a few basic functions, Internet developers must address this gap.
Even in the US, this has proved to be a problem. A new study at Northwestern University found that, among Americans, those from privileged backgrounds tend to have much higher skill levels and use the Web for more activities than those from less affluent families with equal Internet access. "Just because people gain access doesn’t mean that now they know how to use the Internet," says the author Eszter Hargittai, "Even if we put a lot of effort into connecting more people [the concern is that] even once people obtain access, we will continue to observe considerable variation in their skills and online behavior. "
For those outside the US, crossing the digital divide may seem even more daunting. In the Middle East, since 2000, Internet use has grown faster than anywhere else in the world. Although there are more Arabs online every day and their language is the world’s fifth most widely spoken, less than 1 percent of Web content is in Arabic. Within the region, Jordan has been one of the most active countries bridging the digital divide. Here the information technology (IT) sector enjoys p support from King Abdullah II and makes up 12 percent of the nation’s GDP. According to StartupArabia, a website dedicated to tracking Arab tech companies, only the United Arab Emirates has surpassed Jordan in the number of start-ups.
"Jordan doesn’t have resources. We don’t have oil; we don’t have any major mineral resources; the only thing we have is education," says Khamis Omar, dean of the IT department at the Princess Sumaya University for Technology in Amman. Despite these successes, Jordan is still on the far side of the perceived chasm. Only 54 percent of Jordanian homes have a personal computer and about 30 percent of people use the Internet. Of those who don’t have computers, about half said they couldn’t afford them while 40 percent said they didn’t need them.
In some regards, it may take decades for the Internet, like other technological revolutions, to take firm root outside its place of origin, says Steven Low, a computer science professor at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. "It takes time not only for the technology to mature, but also for [a different] society to learn how to use it and then adapt how you live or how you work to make the most use of it," he says. "That process has been going on in the developed world for the last several decades in terms of IT … but it’s only starting for the developing world. " In the meantime, Robert Fadel of the nonprofit One Laptop Per Child says one of the most important things is to continue making technology available to more people so they can find ways to make it applicable to their lives. In the past two years, OLPC has helped distribute 1.5 million laptops to children in 35 countries.
"Children with the support of their community and their parents and teachers, will find it all out, they will discover it. We can help them out by giving them the freedom and the access to use such tools," says Mr. Fadel. He adds that worrying that people might not get the full benefit of the Internet because they don’t know how to use it, is like worrying that people may not benefit from a library if no one explains how to use it.
Still, Mr. Hargittai says that, for real Internet equality, it will likely take more than simply putting the tools in people’s hands. Organizations working to bridge the divide must "devote resources to offering support, and potentially having a center where people can go for support, offering informal classes or instruction for the community," she says. She adds that any classes would need to effectively target the necessary audience, as many people may not know how much more they have to learn.
1.What is the digital divide discussed in the passage What does such a social gap tell us