 Palliative care is something that works with the diagnosis, which are incurable, for example, cancer. Many of the bedridden patients with paralysis. So the way we look at them, we think about to improve the quality of their life, relive their sufferings as well as their families. In palliative care there is a physical part where we do mainly the symptom management and that symptom includes pain, breathlessness, insomnia and nausea, vomiting. One of our services is empowering the patient's relatives, patient caregivers, which definitely helps the patient as these type of patients cannot always come to the facility, to the hospital. So if their caregivers can help them, they can help themselves and empower themselves that help them more. Then we do psychological care as breaking off bad news, having a conversation with family regarding what we can do, what are the options available here and what can be the next plan for this patient. And social part also because in this country, even in the Stroinga context also, there are some stigma, stigma regarding some diagnosis. We do communication with spiritual leaders like Imam Majhi and Mullahs here to make them understand what palliative care is. He met patients' relatives who said, I know my mom is going to die, but if you could do something to relieve her pain. There is still some way you can think about relieving the sufferings, not indicating whether he or she will die or their survival rate is so good, the disease prognosis is so good, but you can think about a dignified, respectful service to all of them, to all of them irrespective of their ethnicity, race, age and sex.