oh say can you see by the dawn s early light what so proudly we hailed at the twilight s last gleaming whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight over the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rockets red glare the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there oh say does that star-spangled banner yet wave over the land of the free and the home of the brave will: the tradition continues. our nation s and them live from a different location. we are honored to be at the us military academy at west point for fox and friends weekend and it is a beautiful seen both behind us and in front of us. good morning, what a remarkable shot. will: what you are seeing is the banjo, and a cripple independence day celebration, fireworks show, the 3 of us will be hosting it for the fox news channel, the next two mornings with this incredible backdrop of the hudson ri
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a bill into law May 2 preventing nonphysicians from using specialty titles such as doctor. It will affect advanced practice registered nurses and physician assistants who hold doctorate degrees.
wounds as well. there s tactical combat casualty units of nonphysicians who are trained in our military to be on the battlefield and to intervene in the first hour, the golden hour, to stop bleeding, to get airways, reinflate lungs and even nonphysicians, so you can get to the hospital, the place where they can take care of you because 90% of all military deaths occur before you get somebody to hospital. the military has an amazing history of medical advances we then use, antibiotics, first tried in world war ii, tourniquet s first tried by alexander the great in the fourth century, stretchers used in the middle ages. the latest advances in stopping bleeding, trauma surgery is used in the civilian theater. military deserves all the credit for this.
routine proceeds but they don t have the ability to diagnosis. that s dangerous. there s some dispute where l these folks are the ones who i would diagnosis. a lot of the tests, the doctors decide. there s a big push to enable nurse practitioners to actually admit patients to a hospital, diagnosis them, treat them, and discharge them, and they won t see a doctor, and it s not just california, neil. the department of health and human services announced last week, an initiative to override state laws that limit what nonphysicians can do. and you re going to hear more of this. absolutely. and by the way, this is tried under the clinton plan many years before, and we know from the research that a patient alone in an operating room with a nurse a nose the tis anesthesiaist. thank you very much. the doctor who didn t have a