 Hi, my name is Tatyana Feldman. I'm attending in the lymphoma division at John Thurer Cancer Center and the director of T-cell lymphoma program. Our cancer center is a very big cancer center. It's an institution which started as a private practice really, and a private practice is always much more patient-oriented, and we have a lot of supportive personnel, because very frequently the doctor time could be very limited, and you need to talk a lot about what are we going to do, how are we going to do it, what's going to be the schedule, but there is obviously quite a lot of anxiety about a lot of issues from what do I eat, to what do I do with insurance, the anxiety about work, et cetera. So we have our nurses in the clinic who are very, very experienced. Some people I've been here for 15 years, and I've been working with the same people for 10, 15 years, so they're very experienced in oncology and how to deal when someone is in this situation. There is like a very big community, and a lot of people know each other through community, believe it or not. I think it could be very helpful. Then we have a nutritionist, we have social workers who also can provide just a talk on the phone and some advice and also to provide whatever resources are available from small grants to helping navigate insurances, et cetera. But I think this institution is quite phenomenal in a way that it's quite personable. I think our patients get quite a lot of, I would say, not just dry type of medical care, that's what you have, that's what we're going to do. I think there is also quite a lot of emotional support around.