 Areas where we know that protons are extremely helpful are in areas where there's complicated anatomy, such as in the head and neck. So tumors of the brain, head and neck, spine, and in pediatric patients who still have a lot of development to undergo. In addition, proton therapy can be used in all other areas of the body, including lung, breast, prostate, soft tissues. Proton therapy requires a very different set of equipment for delivery than traditional photon-based or x-ray-based radiation that is available in most radiation centers around the country. Proton therapy, by virtue of the fact that the equipment is actually much larger than more common types of external beam radiation, special facilities or parts of facilities have to be constructed to be able to deliver or provide proton therapy to patients. In the case of Hackensack Meridian Health, we have developed a joint venture with the Procure Proton Therapy Center, which is a freestanding proton center in Somerset, New Jersey, to avail us of having the ability to treat patients at a facility that is already very experienced and well established in treating with proton therapy. Over the past several decades, radiation therapy has undergone several significant changes, including most recently the advent of intensity-modulated radiation therapy as well as proton therapy. The field is continuously innovating and finding ways to treat patients better with fewer side effects, with shorter courses of treatment, with more personalized ways of approaching therapy based on an individual's disease, tumor characteristics, and individual personal genetics. I would certainly encourage any physician, whether a primary care physician or another member of a patient's team, if they thought that proton therapy, by virtue of it being a more precise way of targeting tumors, if that could be a benefit to a patient, they're certainly always welcome to reach out to me to discuss and try to help determine before a patient comes see me whether it would be worth having a patient come in for an in-person visit.