 I'm Michael Rosenberg. I'm the Director of Neuroophthalmology at the JFK Neuroscience Institute. One of the reasons I came to JFK about 40 years ago was that the New Jersey, at that time it was called the New Jersey Neuroscience Institute, and it was based on a principle of teamwork that everybody involved would be on the same team. Neurologists, neurosurgeons, neuropsychologists, the technicians, everybody felt like they were part of the same team. So one of the things I see a fair number of patients with something called optic neuritis, which is an acute inflammation of the optic nerve. So they complain of acute vision loss in one eye. When someone has optic neuritis, we know that a significant percentage of those people may well go on to develop multiple sclerosis. The ability to be able to talk to him and to have people who are at the forefront of treatment and multiple sclerosis available to discuss and to help plan treatment for these patients has made a big difference. In neurophthalmology, there are frequently patients that have neurosurgical problems. As opposed to seeing somebody and giving them a prescription or a consult to see another doctor that they may not see in one week or two weeks or whatever, I can just have them sit and go down the hall and speak to the doctor and maybe they can actually see them in that same day or they get an appointment to see them in the near future. From top to bottom, a multidisciplinary approach is just the best. Not only when I'm seeing the patient, I can speak to other doctors and get other consults from them, but also in the therapy. They can do physical therapy and occupational therapy and get speech therapy all in the same location.