 Hello, it's Jeremy Hunter and it's my very great pleasure to send you greetings from London for the World Patient Safety, Science and Technology Summit in your 10th year. And I want to say, well done Joe. Joe Kearney has been a total inspiration in getting these summits off the ground. He's co-opted people like me. I was Health Secretary in the UK when I first met Joe. President Clinton, who I know is with you, Dr Tedros at the World Health Organization and all of us, he has given this simple message that even one preventable death is too many. We should be aiming for zero. In my case, I even wrote a book called Zero. I was so inspired by Joe. But the result of all that is that we now have the World Health Organization doing an annual World Patient Safety Day with a 10-year plan to reduce preventable death. And we have a ministerial summit that this year in Montreal and Switzerland saw more than 100 countries representing. So we're making great progress, but there's a lot of work to do. And the fact that you're all meeting together is testament to your commitment. So thank you for everything you're doing. Let me leave you with a saying I think many of you will know from Aristotle. He said, the problem is not aiming too high and missing. It's aiming too low and hitting. Well, it is not aiming too high to say we should stop preventable death. But it is certainly aiming too low to say it's inevitable. None of you are falling into that trap. Thank you for your fantastic work and have a really good summit.