 Ladies and gentlemen, dear Joe, my name, if you have heard, is Kajt Sagaroski, and I'm the co-founder of the World Patient Blood Management Network. Back in 2017, I founded the World Patient Blood Management Network with my partner, Professor Patrick Maybaum at the Patient Safety Movement Foundation Summit in Dana Point in California. So we have promised our audience, so it's basically you and especially Joe, that we would recruit hospitals within the worldwide PBM network, collect data, provide metrics around the number of lives we have saved through our initiative. So we are proud to announce seven achievements here today. The first one is, we were able to implement patient blood management as a quality indicator into the German choosing wisely campaign. Second, we have achieved a joint recommendation of the patient blood management concept within the German Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, as well as the German Society of Surgery, with all its sub-disciplines containing out of 10 different surgical societies, which are general, vascular surgery, pediatrics, maxillary, neurosurgery, orthopedics, plastic surgery, thoracic surgery, cardiac, and trauma surgery. So we are extremely proud of this achievement. We never thought that we were able to get everybody on the table and doing this. Third, we have performed a meta-analysis consisting of 13 patient blood management studies with approximately 800,000 patients, and the whole thing, including our own trial, with 129,000 patients, which we have presented last year at the summit. And we announce this real proud that 1,220 lives have been saved. Number four, and as you can imagine, I will build it up a little bit for you. Number four, using this meta-analysis, we have analyzed the worldwide 324 million surgeries per year being performed. And we can announce that with the implementation of patient blood management, we can save with your help 494,100 lives a year. So this is the goal. This is set, and we need your help for this. Number five, we are now starting to tackle pre-operative anemia, as it is associated with a 20% longer hospital stay, a two-fold increase of infection, a four-fold increased risk of kidney injury, a three-fold increased risk of mortality, and a five-fold increased risk of transfusion. Number six, now the calculation starts. In a population of 324 million surgical patients worldwide, we identified 65 million patients suffering from pre-operative anemia. So based on the average mortality rate of 1% in surgical patients, we can calculate now that up to 1.3 million lives could be saved every year when pre-operative anemia is diagnosed and treated prior elective surgery. This is the challenge, and we have to do it together. So Patrick and I, we really hope that you all will support us in our PBM initiative to achieve the goal of saving more than one million surgical lives per year. So, ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much for your attention and support. And please, take this home and bring it to your hospital. Thank you, Jim.