 Our goal at JFK University Medical Centers, Center for Robotic Surgery, has primarily been patient safety and as our volume continues to rise, we continue to maintain that goal. Completing 2,000 cases here at JFK University Medical Center is a huge achievement. I'd say if you look at the history of our program, we started our program in April of 2016. We've had exponential growth since that time and we went from a single surgeon, myself did the first case, to well over 15 surgeons covering every surgical subspecialty that currently uses the robot. I like to tell people that it's something that's been around for quite a period of time, even though it may be new to them, it's not new to us. Overall, it's been used across the country, all types of surgeons use it, and it's been proven to be safe. I often reassure patients that the robot does nothing it's told not to do. Essentially, we're in complete control the entire time. The benefit of robotic surgery is a natural progression. We now can perform that minimally invasive surgery or laparoscopy with an instrument, the robot, that allows us to perform surgery on more complex conditions. Less blood loss, less pain, shorter time to discharge, and overall patients recover faster and better. As we treat more patients, our expertise rises and as a result patients' outcomes continue to improve. And that's in line with our whole goal here.