 So at Flintlock, there are two facets of the medical efforts. On the real world side, we're providing direct medical care to all of our participants. So that includes role one, like sick call type care. It also includes role two at all of our training sites. So emergency surgical care. Interoperability is a key portion of delivering seamless, effective medical care. And so Flintlock offers us a great opportunity to practice this interoperability. And then another benefit to training with our partners is to share best practices. We're very proud of what we've done in the U.S. military system. But at the same time, our partners are living in their own AORs and have developed advances and have adapted to their specific needs and threats in their region. So this is our chance to listen to them and learn from what they have learned in their AORs. I'm here at Tomley Air Force Base in Tomley, Ghana, in support of Exercise Flintlock 23. I'm responsible for the routine healthcare day-to-day of the participants, both the trainees and the mentors here, as well as providing emergency medical care as needed. We also had a small class slash introduction with the EMTs, the emergency medical technicians here, just to try and cross-level our and ensure like a mutual understanding between responsibilities and capabilities. Well, I'm here at Flintlock 23. Hope to learn a little bit more about African culture, learn a little bit more about austere medicine. It's kind of fun to be treating patients of different cultures and ethnicities and backgrounds in a different country.