 The Thoughty Autie podcast. The hospital is the place that I think of the most when I think of the downs, the really negative side of not managing sensory environments because the hospital is supposed to be a place that you go to when you need help, when your health is in difficulty. And a lot of autistic people will actually put off going out for stuff because they know that they're going to have to go into a hospital. Yep. You've got those aspects of the fluorescent lights, the reflective floors, the scented cleaning, yes, products, the coffee lounges, the busy waiting rooms, the beeping machines, the beeping machines, other people in distress. Yeah, there's there's so many aspects to to that environment. I mean, not even talking about, you know, getting shots. And yeah, not even like the heavy stuff, like it's heavy. Just being in the presence of a hospital is is a lot to deal with, let alone if you are having a medical procedure. And that's that's a really big issue because if we kind of if you if you instill that these these hospitals are a negative place at young age or even places like the dentist or the haircut, the hairdressers being being others, that can really impact someone's ability to, you know, get their teeth sorted out. Yeah, access health care, get get their their haircut and causing trauma. Exactly. So we did a lot of adjustments there. There was a lot of talk about, you know, monitoring their contrast, providing sensory safe spaces, of course, adjusting the lights, offer offering sensory supports to be used, you know, for situations where you can't control the noise due to the amount of people there. Just little things like that. We kind of we kind of did some some like sensory training to like make some of the hospital staff more aware of these these things and be a bit more proactive in talking to the young people about the changes that they're making and stuff. There's little things like that I think can be can be really, really useful in in those public public settings. And quite often they're not very expensive or they're very cheap. They're just adjustments. Yeah, you just need someone to go in and be accountable and actually do the the damn work, which is often the hardest thing about any any workplaces or institutions or organisations, public spaces. It's getting someone to actually just go in and do it or just commission someone to do it. It's just so complex. It is complex. And I like how you said it's about being proactive. We don't need to just do a bandaid fix. I we're not treating the outside external behaviour, but we're actually looking at making the environment safe.