 So sex refers to the biological differences while gender describes the characteristics that a society or culture delineates as the masculine or feminine, the norms that affect access to services, the gender norms, the risk-taking and protective behaviors, the gender-based violence and access to prevention messages, all coming out of this. And tackling the structural drivers of the epidemic that lead to the gender inequities really have become clear to us to be the key to responding to the HIV epidemic. These are some of the statistics that show the disproportionate vulnerability of women to this epidemic. In sub-Saharan Africa, 60% of those living with HIV are women. In the nine countries in southern Africa most affected by HIV, the prevalence among young women 15 to 24 was on average about three times that than the men. A review of the studies of child sexual abuse across the world reports a prevalence range from 2 to 62%. It is clear to us that a woman-focused approach is the most effective at identification and retention issues over time and that if we feature and target her for that entry and retention strategy, we are more likely to be successful in retaining children and family. Instead of listening to complaints of diabetes, coronary artery disease, screening for high blood pressure, having a woman who gets pregnant and has a baby, we can now access family planning services to from a different vantage point from their HIV AIDS platform. All of these expansion of service capability is really something that we believe is the first step toward putting a basement of health care capability out there for the planet.