 Asthma affects about 340 million people worldwide. It can definitely be fatal, unfortunately. The very first time I had an asthma attack, I think I was about four years old. I just remember being in my parents' bedroom and kind of walking around the bed and I'm being confused. I was crying because I didn't know what was going on and I couldn't breathe properly. It is a very helpless feeling, extremely helpless and hopeless that you cannot actually help your child. My dad took me to the GP and the GP explained your child's airway should be about this, but right now it's like this. So if you try to breathe through clenched fists, it will be quite hard and that's what your child is experiencing right now. I think she chose to do respia because of her own experience with asthma. I understand the challenges that I faced when growing up and the challenges that my parents faced trying to treat and give me the right medication. I took a cough just as a light cold. I didn't realize this was asthma. Obviously there was an emergency and a situation and we would have benefited greatly from the monitoring that would save me a lot of anguish having gone through that for my child. That definitely would have reduced how many asthma attacks I had and perhaps even stopped me going to hospital a couple of different times. It could have been really tragic, yes. So I wanted to design a product that helps manage and prevent asthma attacks or hospitalizations. I saw this amazing opportunity to help out people in a way that's really significant. Respia is a three-part system. We have the wearable patch that monitors the acoustic signs of exacerbation in the lungs. We have the smart phone app that prompts parents if there are exacerbations and there's also a smart inhaler that tracks which medication you took at what time and how many doses and it's all automatic. Wearable technology like Respia has the potential to save lives by identifying changes in asthma control in patients who are too young to tell us about these symptoms. There is a huge gap in the market for preventative therapies. All there is right now is predominantly reactive methods to asthma. So if you can pick up an asthma attack early enough you can completely negate having that asthma attack. We are still in the research and development stage. We are currently in the process of raising capital. Biggest hurdles are going to be clinical studies and not only is it expensive but all the applications and all the forms you have to do are extremely rigorous. The Dyson Award definitely gave a platform and a voice in an industry where you as a graduate often can't be heard. When we're pitching to investors or to anyone who's interested in medical professionals and they see the little James Dyson logo it always opens up another conversation. Respia has a whole lot of promise. It's worth the hard work that the entire team behind it is putting in. Personal experience and technical ability puts in a perfect position I think to actually carry this through. We're definitely rocking the boat. This is our goal to create the best user experience and solution for this particular problem that has been severely under addressed.