Doctor praised former president’s ‘adroitness’ in handling the attempted assassination
The morning after former President Donald Trump survived an assassination attempt during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday afternoon, Dr. Marc Siegel spoke to Fox News about the "miraculous" outcome.
Appearing on "America Reports," the Fox News medical contributor and clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center expressed his admiration for Trump’s reaction in what he described as a "war zone."
"The crowd kept its composure when this was going on … They were led by President Trump’s rally cry, raising his fist, saying ‘Fight’ and not giving up," Siegel said.
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"From a medical point of view, that idea of showing courage, and then showing compassion, reaching out on social media to the families of the victim and those who were injured, also sends the right message."
The doctor also noted the quickness with which Trump got down when the shots were fired and then was led off the stage, which showed an "adroitness."
The morning after former President Donald Trump survived an assassination attempt during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday afternoon, Dr. Marc Siegel spoke to Fox News about the "miraculous" outcome. (Fox News/Getty Images)
"You don’t know what you’re going to do in that situation," he said.
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Siegel also emphasized how "miraculous" it is that the former president survived the incident.
"I’ve been talking to emergency room doctors, vascular surgeons and trauma surgeons all over the country this morning, and nobody can remember a case like this," he said.
"I’ve been talking to emergency room doctors, vascular surgeons and trauma surgeons all over the country this morning, and nobody can remember a case like this," Dr. Siegel said. (Dr. Marc Siegel)
In particular, the doctor noted how rare it is for someone to be only grazed by a bullet from a high-powered file.
"I trained in the Bellevue [Hospital Center] emergency room, I took care of gunshot victims countless times, and I never saw anything from a high-powered rifle that only grazed something."
Audience members duck in the crowd during a shooting attempt at a campaign rally for GOP presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump at Butler Farm Show Inc. on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images)
"People can recount someone being grazed by a bullet — I’ve seen that in the ER, but never from a high-powered rifle," Siegel said.
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The doctor stressed the small chance of Trump escaping this alive — "especially since it’s next to the part of the brain that is absolutely uniformly deadly, over 95% deadly, if he’d been hit in the brain there."
Melissa Rudy is senior health editor and a member of the lifestyle team at Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to