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This text is for questions 24 to 27.
Burns and scalds are damage to the skin usually caused by heat. Both are treated in the same way. A burn is caused by dry heat-by an iron or fire, for example. A scald is caused by something wet, such as hot water or steam.
The amount of pain you feel is not always related to how serious the burn is. If you get burned, cool the burn with cool or lukewarm running water for 20 minutes. Do not use ice, iced water, or any creams or greasy substances like butter. If you don't want to get worse, you should remove any clothing or jewellery that's near the burnt area of skin, but do not move anything that's stuck to the skin.
If you are taking care of a person who
get burned, use painkillers to treat any pain.
However, if it's an acid or chemical burn, call
paramedics right away. Before they arrive, you'd better carefully try to remove the chemical and any contaminated clothing, and rinse the affected area using as much clean water as possible.
Adopted from: https://web.archive.org/
web/20210430050308/https://www.nhs.uk/
conditions/burns-and-scalds/ (May 9, 2021)

24. What is the text about?
A. Why burns occur
B. How to treat burn
C. Why burns are serious
D. What burns and scalds are
E. The diffrence between burns and scalds

25. Who is the paragraph two beneficial for?
A. A person who suffers from dry heat
B. A person who suffers from rash skin
C. A person who gets burned
D. A person who needs a painkiller
E. A person who needs medical attention

26. "If you don't want to get worse, you should remove any clothing or jewellery ....
(Paragraph 2)
What does the word 'to remove' mean?
A. To bury
B. To wear
C. To attach
D. To pull
E. To release

27. "Before they arrive, you'd better carefully try to remove the chemical and any contaminated clothing,...." (Last paragraph)
What does the word 'they' refer to?
A. Painkillers
B. Paramedics
C. Burns
D. Clean water
E. Chemical burns​