◎ 题干
阅读理解。

     People in China are among the  most fearful of getting old, a new global survey suggests.
     According to Bupa, a British healthcare organization, which asked 12262 people in 12
countries about their attitudes toward aging, 28  percent of the Chinese polled said they feel
depressed when they think about getting old.
     And although 72 percent of all respondents aged 65 and over  said they do not feel old,
the survey conducted in June and July this year found more than half of those aged 45 to 54
in China already consider themselves to be elderly. About 30 percent  of Chinese respondents
said they worry about who will look after them in later years, while 91 percent agreed the
government of the world's most populous nation  should improve care for the elderly.
     However, because people in China think about their future earlier, research suggests the
country could be one of the best prepared for addressing the aging problem. About one third
of Chinese respondents--more than double the global average-said they have put money aside
for retirement, while 46 percent have taken out insurance, the poll showed. Despite being one
of the best prepared nations, three fifths of those surveyed in China expect their family to care
for them when they can no longer do so themselves.
     A Bupa-sponsored report,however, revealed that the "informal care network"  (the traditional
pattern of families looking after the elderly) is disintegrating. This is due to a number of factors,
said the report, including structural changes to the population, the increase of women in employment,
the increase of one-person households and the rise in divorce rates.
     The first batch of Chinese couples with only one child are largely in their 50s or 60s because the
country's family planning policy was adopted in the late 1970s.
     Li Yinping, 55, a retired accountant, said she thinks only people in their 70s can be called old.
She said her pension is enough to support her in later years and that her only hope is that her son
can visit regularly. "I don't worry about my later years at all," said Li. "When I'm old, I can turn to a
rest home. The local hospital can deliver the medicine I need with just a phone call."
     Xiao Zhe, a 26-year-old computer engineer in Beijing, is an only child whose parents live in his
hometown of Chongqing. "I'm so busy with my work that I can't go back to visit them often," he said.
"When they're not able to care for themselves, I will hire a nurse to look after them."
     China will become the oldest society in the world by 2030, according to a recent report by a
Beijing-based government think tank. The United Nations also forecasts that people aged 60 and
over will account for 28 percent of the country's total population by 2040.

1. Which of the following can be best title of the passage? ________.
A. the Aging problem of China    
B. Who is to look after the elders
C. Chinese are afraid of getting old
D. Old Home Is Popular in China
2. Many factors EXCEPT _______ have a great impact on informal care network.
A. structural changes to the population
B. the increase of women in employment
C. the development of economy
D. the rise in divorce rates
3. According to the passage, most Chinese people are ________ to guarantee the late life. 
A. putting away some money
B. giving birth to more children
C. hiring a nurse
D. turning to a rest home
4. What can be inferred from the last four paragraphs? ________ 

A. Chinese government put forward family planning policy in the late 1970s.
B. Senior citizens will account for a high percentage of the country's total population by 2040.
C. The local hospital can deliver the medicine to senior citizens in need.
D. There is a trend that grown-up children live apart from parents

◎ 答案
查看答案
◎ 解析
查看解析
◎ 知识点
    根据n多题专家分析,试题“阅读理解。 People in China are among the most fearful of getting old, a new global survey suggests. According to Bupa, a British healthcare organization, which …”主要考查了你对  【社会现象类阅读】  等知识点的理解和应用能力。关于这些知识点的“档案”,你可以点击相应的链接进行查看和学习。