 My name is André Guant. I'm the chair of Jean Turret Cancer Center and a division chief of the lymphoma program, as well as a physician and chief of oncology for Huck and Sack Maintain Health. When I was in medical school I was very interested in lab research and the transitional aspect of things and innovation and I wanted a specialty that would be a dynamic specialty that would move. When I first see patients I'm very curious about people and I want to understand who they are and I think it helps me a lot down the road when I need to take them somewhere sometimes not easy to the treatment and it's very helpful. You also need to understand the dynamics of the ecosystem of the patient what's happening in their family and their surroundings because it also helps you take into account when you make treatment decisions. I think that if you've done this for so long you develop almost like a sixth sense of what do you have to do but I always say in order to think outside the box you need to be really confident in what you do to be able to go out of your comfort zone but that's the beauty of it that's what makes medicine an art really and that's what wakes me up anymore every morning because the clinic only care that's why when I became the deputy chair and then the chair people thought I was going to stop seeing patient I'm not going to stop seeing patient actually a thing that every administrator should see patient and there's nothing better than saving someone's life.