 And in this context, you're talking about some of the impact of the occupation on the health system. So in a larger level, how has the health system been affected? Especially when it comes to personal and equipment. When it comes to doctors, healthcare personnel in terms of their training, in terms of the psychological situation they're in. What is happening right now? Okay, yes, of course. When there is the lockdown, all the medical, all the healthcare system, they are not in lockdown, all the healthcare professionals, they should be ready in the first line. So yes, of course, in the earlier time of COVID-19, like I'm talking about March time, most of the organization, even the NGOs and the private, and even the Ministry of Health, they have difficulty in supporting the availability of all the COVID-19 precautions, like the gowns, the masks, the fields, the gloves, the hygiene kits, and all the disinfectants. But now, because of WHO and other international, they started to be available. And the private sector, they start also to bring this kind of equipment, but it was very expensive. It was, let's say, ten times more their price. For example, we couldn't buy for our staff, but at least now the situation is much better. Now most of the protective devices and equipments are available for the medical staff. Of course, the medical staff from nurses and doctors, as a health system, they suffer from shortage of nurses and doctors. And you know some doctors and nurses and technicians, lab technicians, for example, they have their own problems that, for example, she's pregnant or they have some chronic disease, they should stay according to the criteria they should be staying at home. And this is what happened in the Ministry of Health and in our organization that we asked them to stay at home because they have other medical problems. When the team of nurses and doctors go to work in the quarantine areas, they should stay there for 14 days. And after 14 days, they should go back. So this means that medical staff, they are isolated from their social network. They are isolated from their families, from their children. Whether I'm talking about men or women, if she is mother and she will not see her child or take care of her child. Yes, this is a very difficult situation. And also, yes, psychologically, it's very dramatic for the medical and professional. They were worried that they would be a victim of COVID because of working with the people who are having this kind of virus. Yeah, and there is a number, let's say, of nurses and doctors and get technician. They were infected by COVID-19 and they were in quarantine and they will have some complications. They have been in the ICU bed and under ventilator, but they're lucky still we don't have any case. I guess, yes, I guess maybe one or two cases, they died from COVID, which is, let's say, something good for medical and staff because we feel that losing one medical staff or it will be a problem for our healthcare system. And then of dealing with this kind of virus, there were a plan at the national level to train our doctors and nurses how to protect themselves, how to deal with the Ministry of Health and the NGOs. We do a lot of self-supported group ventilation to do healing for their psychology because yes, it's very burning for them and for their emotions and for a logical afraid from having the COVID feeling they are isolated from their networks and families and friends. The stigmatization also is very important for the medical staff and for the people they afraid and they don't want other people and their neighbors to know that they have COVID. You know, this is the situation of stigmatization is very difficult. So yes, there is a lot of, let's say, psychological intervention provided by the psychologist, provided by a team working inside the organization like our organization we did for our healthy professionals. We did also psychological support through helplines for the women, for people with disabilities, for elderly people, for also people inside the quarantine. We have a hotline and the numbers and there is another organization also they give support through telephone or WhatsApp or Skype because also as an organization and as a healthcare system also they deal with the victim of violence. So we continue to provide them support through the phone. Many services provided face-to-face through phone call. For example, in our organization unless we prepare our centers as primary healthcare centers with a tent and a screening area we were calling our clients like the pregnant women through the phone call telling them what to do and so on. So yes, we try to find alternative. We use as a medical staff to work during intifada and during the emergency during this conflict to always we will find the alternative and the beauty of the work that we have a national health committee run by Ministry of Health, all the health sectors set and they talk about the plan, the protocol, what to do how we can divide the work who can take care of the psychological support who can go for home visits or do mobile clinic because we continue to do mobile clinic reach the people in the marginalized area do home visits with all the precautions needed provide the sanitation material for the people and for the poor area in the poor area and the very marginalized area provide medication for the people with chronic disease because there is an interruption in the system in the protocol for the elderly people for the people with disability, for chronic disease people for all cancer people. So we try as a healthcare system and as an organization and as a health activist to focus and reach those groups and provide them with at least primary healthcare services unless the thing go returned back to the normal life hopefully. Thank you so much for talking to us. You're welcome. That's all we have time for today, keep watching People's Dispatch. Thank you.