2006年VOA标准英语-Progress Reported on AIDS, Bird Flu, Malaria, C(在线收听) |
By Melinda Smith and Paul Sisco Within the next quarter century, AIDS is projected to be among the top three causes of death around the world. That dire prediction comes from researchers at the World Health Organization. More dire predictions come from climatologists, who say there's new evidence of the impact of rising global temperatures. VOA's Melinda Smith and Paul Sisco look at the top medical and science developments of 2006. Melinda Smith narrates. Another 39-million are still living with HIV or AIDS. Health officials continued to preach the practice of safe sex ...such as the use of condoms. Clinical trials in which circumcision was performed on a group of adult heterosexual men showed great promise in reducing the risk of AIDS. In 2006 the World Health Organization reversed itself and approved the use of DDT to spray indoors for the mosquito parasite that causes malaria. DDT has been banned for agricultural use for 30 years because of possible links to cancer. However world health officials believe this version of the insecticide is not harmful to humans. There was growing concern in 2006 about the spread of avian flu to humans, and in particular, fears the H5N1 virus could stimulate a human-to-human influenza pandemic. Scientists are working to develop a vaccine. Towards year's end United Nations health officials called for the wide distribution of a new affordable vaccine against the human pailloma virus. HPV causes 70 per cent of cervical cancers. Cervical cancer is the second most common type of cancer among women. On the medical research front, stem cells were in the news this year. President Bush vetoed federal funds for research in the United States. In South Korea, some highly-touted successes were proven false. Nevertheless, research continues worldwide, and stem cell therapies are showing promise in battling a number of neurological diseases. Some scientists say a hotter planet could be to blame for such natural disasters as the year's wildfires in the western United States, and growing drought conditions in Africa, and typhoons caused mudslides in China and the Philippines which claimed thousands of lives. Discovery of another kind from the distant past. In February, a 3,000-year-old tomb was found in Egypt's Valley of the Kings. In September, scientists also announced they had found the skeleton of a 3-million-year-old early human ancestor. Back to the future... NASA returned to space in 2006 with three crucial shuttle missions to the expanding International Space Station. Planetary probes, scrutinizing Mars, found signs of recently flowing water. Another probe gave us incredible images of Saturn and its rings. In August, a conference of astronomers stripped Pluto of its status as a planet, but NASA is still sending a probe to Pluto. It arrives in 2015. Finally, the US space agency also began a countdown of another sort, revealing its design for the next generation space shuttle craft and announcing plans for a multinational, permanently-manned base on the moon by 2020. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/12/36292.html |