 In medicine, we have the golden hour. The faster you get advanced medical treatment, survival rate increases. So this training is important because it's going to get us ready medically to support the Marines and all the warfighters out there. Something happened to them. We'll be back here ready. It's going to refresh our skills as well. We have a scenario where we have some Marines out there and they take fire and they're going to come in injured. We're a medical asset and so we just have to be prepared to support CLB6 and whatever unit we attach to medically. It builds teamwork. We learn what to do so that way when it comes in we're kind of a mirror with each other. We're a mirror for our equipment and we're good to go so we can get people the best treatment. It gives us the opportunity to work together within this environment because some of us have worked in ER, some of us have worked in the clinic, but we've never really worked in this type of environment. So it allows us to come together, be able to fix up a tent, treat a patient and operate the first and SDP efficiently. We're all dependent on one another and so the better I'm trained, the better you're trained to do your job is that full circle. Should something happen, nor my job is going to keep people alive and them doing their job is going to keep people alive in return. We're just highly mobile, highly capable. We're just ready to go wherever we need it. Help keep people alive and keep people in the fight.