单项选择题

They say that sticks and stones may break your bones, but words will never hurt you. Yet childhood bullying really can damage your long-term health.
Gone are the days when bullying was considered an inevitable and ultimately harmless part of growing up—just last month we learned that childhood bullying can lead to poorer mental health even into middle age.
Now William Copeland at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and his colleagues have shown that it can have lingering physiological effects too. They tracked 1420 9-year-olds right through their teens. Each child was seen up to nine times during the study and quizzed about bullying. The team then measured levels of C-reactive protein in their blood. CRP is a marker of inflammation (炎症) linked to higher risk of cardiovascular disease (心血管疾病) and problems like diabetes.
"Because we were collecting biological samples throughout, we were able to look at CRP levels in subjects prior to their bullying involvement," says Copeland. "This really gives us an idea of the changes bullying brings about."
Although CRP levels naturally rise in everyone during adolescence, levels were highest in children who reported being tormented by bullies. Even at the ages of 19 and 21, children who had once been bullied had CRP levels about 1.4 times higher than peers who were neither perpetrators nor victims. In a cruel twist, the bullies had the lowest levels of all, suggesting they didn’t suffer the same health risks. They may even see a benefit from their behavior, though Copeland stresses it doesn’t vindicate (辩护) their actions. "The goal would instead be to find other ways to produce this protective effect without it being at someone else’s expense," he says.
Andrea Danese at King’s College London has previously shown that maltreatment during childhood can lead to high levels of inflammation in adult life. "This new study is a helpful addition in showing that these effects extend to another important childhood stressor," he says. He suggests that care workers could monitor levels of CRP in children having psychotherapy to see if it is helping to soothe the stress of being bullied.

What does Andrea Danese suggest about childhood maltreatment()

A. It has nothing to do with inflammation in adult life.
B. Copeland’s study shows nothing related to it.
C. CRP is the marker of childhood abuse.
D. It has an influence on Children’s CRP levels.

热门 试题

填空题
C
填空题
Environmentalists have noted that almost 50% of waste all over the globe (26) e-waste since the advent of technology. E-wastes, as its label suggests, are any unused and broken gadget left in the trash bin, which is then (27) to landfills when not properly disposed. E-wastes can be a pile of mobile phones, computers, laptops, television sets, and (28) systems. These gadgets don’t only contain chips that help us get through our work breezily, but they also contain tons of chemicals that can readily blend with the air, water, and land when not disposed properly. These chemicals can bring about (29) of land and death to many marine (30) when its penetration to such places isn’t regulated and stopped. Thankfully, copious businesses, private organizations, and groups are (31) to greatly reduce the bulk of e-waste in landfills. Mobile companies are (32) unused and broken mobile phones at their drop-off centers. Some are even paying to those who can give back unused phones to them. (33) , everyone is encouraged to take steps to minimize the use of extra gadgets as well as take good care of their devices to (34) its life span. Furthermore, gadget owners, specifically cellular phone owners, should know whether or not their phone manufacturers offer drop-off stations for used phones. You could also directly donate or give old phones to people who don’t have enough funds to buy new mobile phones. To reduce e-wastes, we also have to (35) gadgets compulsively even when we don’t really need them.