 Thank you, Dr. Beam, and thank you for our first panel for a great start to today's symposium. It's my pleasure to introduce my colleague, the Vice President of Sports Medicine for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, Mr. Dustin Nabhan. Dustin is a proud University of Arizona Wildcat and a proud Kofa High School King. He has been an incredible peer in creating innovative partnerships with regional medical facilities all over the United States and, importantly, identifying opportunities to support Team USA athletes in preventative medicine. So, Dustin, please lead the Q&A. Thank you, Charlie, and go Kofa Kings. So we have some great questions that came from the audience. And Dr. Barr, the first question is for you if you could please unmute yourself. And I should mention to the group that Dr. Beam was not able to join us today. Dr. Barr, you talked about the current state of your screening and monitoring programs. Can you talk to us about what you think the future looks like? Well, I think I guess the holy grail of this area is a system where you put all the information you collect on the athlete, including all the medical information we have from screening, including the data we get from monitoring tools, adding all the low data, adding everything the athlete does, how he sleeps, his relationships with his family, his moods, throw everything into a smart computer, and out comes a number that says that, well, today you should reduce your training by 50%, or now it's safe to train really, really hard. I think we're quite away from that goal yet, and there are a number of reasons for that. But I guess that is what we're all hoping for, that we can use these data live in order to help the athlete plan his or her training program. Professor Barr, we are on the quest for the holy grail with you, and we hope one day that that is possible. What we have you on microphone and camera, can you discuss what you're doing to return athletes to training after COVID in Norway and maybe what your friends in Europe are doing? Well, I can speak from Norway. Our Norwegian Olympic Training Centre, as yours, was closed on March 12th when Norway went into lockdown. That means all the things that you're doing as well, working from home and so on and so forth. We have then been able to open the Centre for Restricted Training, in other words, a fixed number of people in the room, or in the room, so I should say. So basically we have the capacity now of allowing 12 athletes to train in our facilities at the same time. They observe social distancing. There are very strict disinfecting routines in place before and after each athlete leaves. So at the moment we're allowing limited training, individual training, our facilities. But no team trainings, our handball team cannot train as a team. Throwing a ball and catching a ball is still out of the question. And we also have been able to move into a phase where small teams are sequestered. So living together, all healthy, going into the programme, living together, training together, and with minimal contact with the outside world. And I think that is the step that we're exploring now for more and more teams. Move them into one facility, keep them away from the world, but let them train more normally. We still haven't been able to open swimming pools, so that's still out from our side. Thank you, Professor Barr. I think we'll follow that with the Covid Return to Training question for Dr. Finnoff. Can you talk similar to what Professor Barr just spoke about some of the housing complications that this causes? Can you talk in detail about how we're managing the return to living at training centres and training sites? Yes, thank you, Dustin. Essentially we are, with returning to the Olympic and Paralympic training sites, we're going to be bringing athletes in. And they're coming from all over the country. And so some places will have a low risk of Covid-19 and others will have a high prevalence of Covid-19. And therefore, we're going to have to assume that they've been exposed and may actually even be currently contagious without even knowing it. So when they arrive, we're going to certainly do symptom checks and temperature checks, but we are also going to test them upon entering our facility to see if they currently have an infection. We're not using serology because at this point, serology tests are difficult to interpret. They're more for research purposes, specifically epidemiology and not for clinical decision making. And we're going to be using PCR tests with mucus swabs from the nasopharynx. If they are negative, then they are entered into the Olympic and Paralympic training centres and they are kept in that protected unit where it's cleaned and they're separate from the public. So very similar to what Dr. Barr was talking about. For those that are in the – that are not going to be training in the Olympic and Paralympic training centres, I think that Dr. Barr is exactly right. You should have them in an area where there's a low prevalence of Covid-19 in the community. They should be housed together. You know, preferentially, they don't have interactions with the public, so food is delivered. They keep their area clean, they train in their small group, and that minimizes the risk of infection. But despite all of these measures, there is still potentially risk of infection. We can't completely eliminate that. Thank you, Dr. Finnoff. Our next question is for Bahadi. Bahadi, can you tell us about the mental health resources available to Team USA athletes during the Covid crisis? Yes. Thanks, Dustin. Hello to everyone. So, yes, during this time, we have gotten with our medical team and also our internal task force to come up with ways that we can address mental health challenges that may be occurring with our athletes during this time. So one of the first things we did was we expanded our comm psych resources. So traditionally, comm psych resources have been available for athletes who are under the EAHI insurance of the USOPC. But we understood during this time with disruption to an athlete's schedule and also with the postponement of the games that there could be significant stress that would occur within our athlete population. So we wanted to make sure that those resources were available to all of our athletes. Dr. Finnoff and his team and the task force in our internal working group have also been diligently working to identify additional resources in the mental health and wellness space that would help assist our athletes. And we've seen greater engagement from our sports psychology staff on the sports performance side that can help athletes because they have those relationships that are vital to our athletes being taken care of not only on the field of play, but off the field of play as well. So we will continue to look at ways that we can address and improve in those areas, but we've taken some significant steps right off the bat that not only will address where we are in this crisis, but will set us up to have improved mental health resources in the future. Dr. or Professor Barr, we have another question for you. Are mental health conditions monitored in your program that you use with Norwegian athletes? That's an excellent question. So the answer is in terms of our medical monitoring partly in the sense that we do specifically include mental wellbeing in the question that they're asked weekly from the app that they get from the medical department. But more important is that we also have a separate psychology department where the psychologists are responsible for teams or groups of athletes and work very closely with them also on a day to day basis. So particularly in the situation with the postponement of the Tokyo Games, our team of psychologists are in constant contact with all the athletes on the long candidate list for Tokyo. And of course there are those who struggle, whether it's about financial insecurity, whether it's the question of do I do another year, especially athletes towards the end of their career. They're faced with some difficult choices now and some need help to reorient themselves into perhaps thinking differently about the next year than the goal that they had in July this year. Thank you, Professor Barr. So we're going to end this session. Thank you everyone for the literally hundreds of questions that were contributed to the session. Hopefully we'll see more of the same in the next symposium. And now we're going to kick it over to Charlie, who is going to take us to the break. Charlie, are you ready? Yes, thanks Dustin and thanks panel number one outstanding content. A couple quick shout outs before we go into the break. We have several participants from the United States Air Force Academy on the on the line. And also Alexander Lane from West Point is on the line so thank you to the service academies. Remember, we are Team USA. So thank you for joining us today. A reminder post questions, post questions and you could potentially have one of these. If you post questions trivia polling will start during the break please participate in the trivia polling. And also you're seeing a trailer on the on the screen about a possibility to make a donation in order for spry and the US Olympic and Paralympic Foundation to expand sports medicine and research capabilities. Private funding is critical so appreciate anybody's consideration of making a donation and the information is on the screen. Go to spryvale.org and you can donate to both organizations so you have eight minutes enjoy the break.