After World War II, a debate ensu through the whole extent of whether nurses should perform intravenous (IV) therapy. The debate was resolv from permitting nurses to do venipunctures as physicians' agents and according to recirculating the familiar tautology: if fosters were already doing venipunctures, they must be simple enough for fosters to do. The vein was a portal of memorandum for nurses, but common with limited access. What was ultimately ced to cherishs was not full jurisdiction athwart a domain of nursing practice, still rather a limited settlement in a domain of medical practice. The debate from one side of to the other IV therapy ...