 I'm now standing in one of the anaesthetic rooms of Singleton Operating Theatres. And it was in the Operating Theatres that I started my career, posted my training as a state registered nurse. Theatres in Singleton were a little ahead of their time when I came here first in 1982. Interests were delivered in prepacked, sterilized trays. And when I went to work in other hospitals in Swansea and in London, actually that was not the case. I would have to go to glass cabinets with my little wire tray and pick the instruments off racks and then autoclave them, sterilize them in the theater prior to the operation. So actually my first experience of working here in Swansea was actually on the leading edge of change about how practices in the theater were going at that time. I qualified in 1970. My early career years were as a medical officer in the Royal Navy. And my first excursion into research was as the medical officer on a frigate in the West Indies where we were on hurricane patrol. The job itself I find is very rewarding. It's important in this much that I have a lot of contact with people, people out in the community. I work with the community. It's important that we have a community relationship as well. Part of the job that I try to do now and I should have a more diverse workforce within the Amnus Service. That's bringing in people from different areas and different communities to work with the Amnus Service so that we reflect the people we actually serve.