 Here at GlobalMedic, it's an opportunity for the units to come and perform their missions. Units who have trained hard all year long at their battle assemblies to come and kind of show what they can do and also just to demonstrate that they are prepared to deploy. And it's an opportunity for the leadership to see their whole unit working together and then also work with other units and especially the higher unit. Scenarios really stress the units all the way from point of injury to roll three, field hospital level of care. They have to figure out the problem set of how do we evacuate these patients in a timely manner when Aravac is not available. How do we provide continuum of care throughout that ground in route care? It's also exciting because it challenges them because they're not your average trauma patient for example. If they're able to solve them and treat the patient then the inject is over and then what happens is if they learn something from it or it doesn't go well then we get to do it again and then they're prepared.