Here you have a cloze test, fill in each gap with a word from the chart.
The key is below the test.
Have a nice weekend!
MEDICAL MYTHS
ACTUALLY
|
EXCESSIVE
|
LITTLE
|
HOWEVER
|
SHAVING
|
EVIDENTIAL
|
TO
BE
|
BEING
|
RISK
|
ANY
|
SOME
|
HUNTED
|
CAUSED
|
FEW
|
ALSO
|
TOO
|
DESPITE
|
FROM
|
WHERE
|
BY
|
WHILE
|
NEED
|
TO
|
DISPROVE
|
SHAVE
|
(1) _______ claim drinking eight glasses of water a
day leads to good health, (2) _______ reading in dim light damages eyesight.
Others believe we only use 10% of our brains or that (3) _______ legs causes
hair to grow back thicker. But a review of evidence by US researchers
surrounding seven commonly-held beliefs suggests they are (4)
_______ "medical myths". Some are utterly untrue, while others have no (5)
_______ proof, the British Medical Journal reports.
Researchers from the Indiana University School of
Medicine in Indianapolis (6) _______ medical literature for evidence on each
claim. They found no evidence supporting the (7) _______ to drink eight glasses
of water a day.
In fact, studies suggest that adequate fluid intake is
often met (8) _______ drinking juice, milk, and even caffeine-rich tea and
coffee. Data also suggests drinking (9) _______ amounts of water can be
dangerous.
The belief that we only use 10% of our brains appears (10)
_______ completely untrue. Studies of patients with brain damage suggest that
damage to almost any area of the brain has specific and lasting effects on
mental, vegetative and behavioural capabilities. Brain imaging studies also
show that no area of the brain is completely silent or inactive.
And the belief that hair and fingernails continue to
grow after death may be an optical illusion (11) _______ by retraction of the
skin after death. The actual growth of hair and nails requires a complex
interplay of hormonal regulation not present after death.
Again, illusion may be (12) _______ blame for the
belief that shaving hair causes it to grow back faster, darker, and coarser,
report author Rachel Vreeman told the BMJ. The stubble resulting (13) _______ shaving
grows out without the finer taper seen at the ends of unshaven hair, giving the
impression of thickness and coarseness.
Again, expert opinion is that reading in dim light
does not damage your eyes. And there is (14)
_______ evidence to support the banning of mobile phones from hospitals on the
basis of electromagnetic interference.
Finally, eating turkey - and the tryptophan amino acid
it contains - does not make people especially drowsy. Indeed, turkey, chicken
and minced beef contain similar amounts of tryptophan.
The researchers explained: "(15) _______ large
meal can induce sleepiness because blood flow and oxygenation to the brain
decrease, and meals rich in protein or carbohydrate may cause drowsiness. Wine
may (16) _______ play a role." Dr David Tovey, editor of Clinical Evidence
journal, said: "The difficulty is it is often hard to (17) _______ a
theory. On the flip-side, absence of evidence does not necessarily mean absence
of effect. (18) _______ reliable evidence becomes really important is in
helping people make serious decisions about harms and risks. Many of these
'myths' are innocuous. (19) _______, we are still finding evidence that runs
contrary to current practice and what we expect."
He gave the example of the relatively recent U-turn in
advice over sleeping positions for babies to cut cot deaths. Experts now
recommend babies are positioned on their backs when sleeping to reduce the (20)
_______ of sudden infant death.
KEY
1.
SOME
|
2.
WHILE
|
3.
SHAVING
|
4.
ACTUALLY
|
5.
EVIDENTIAL
|
6.
HUNTED
|
7.
NEED
|
8.
BY
|
9.
EXCESSIVE
|
10.
TO BE
|
11.
CAUSED
|
12.
TO
|
13.
FROM
|
14.
LITTLE
|
15.
ANY
|
16.
ALSO
|
17.
DISPROVE
|
18.
WHERE
|
19.
HOWEVER
|
20.
RISK
|
No comments:
Post a Comment