 So in Kaiser Permanente, the research we do is clinical research, meaning that it's born from the desire to answer a question of how can we take care of patients more effectively? How can we reach the most people to help them with their health? I've always felt that one of the benefits of being a physician is that it enables us to live the credo of being a lifelong learner. And part of learning is helping to give back to the community of medicine what we can identify as best practices. And so for physicians to be able to be part of a research community that develops the answers to those kinds of clinical questions is such an enriching experience. It allows them to give more of themselves to have a legacy beyond taking care of patients day to day. They have changed the way people practice. It raises the quality of care more and it opens more questions because once you start experiencing that you can make a difference in the trajectory of somebody's disease process or keep them healthier than you could before you answered that question that makes people want to do more of that. Want to get more involved with research, want to answer more questions, want to impact more lives.