 I'm Joseph Landoffy, I'm the Chief Medical Officer at JFK University Medical Center. I'm also the Division Chief of Neuro-Oncology and Radio Surgery for JFK Neuroscience. I really believe in treating the whole patient. My philosophy is that as a physician we have an obligation to treat the disease that they're coming to us, you know, with. Right now is a very exciting time to be involved in cancer care as a whole. Advances in surgical techniques, advantages in imaging techniques, targeted therapies where we're not treating a breast cancer, we're not treating a brain tumor, we're treating the molecular targets that a particular tumor has. We have an obligation to treat the disease, but I also believe we have an opportunity to lift the spirits. I get a lot of joy out of making someone who's suffering from a malignant brain tumor laugh. Even if it's for a moment to see the suffering in their eyes from all that's going on around them, be lifted is worth it for me. That's the most satisfying thing about my job and I think it's important for physicians to know by really getting to know the patient, it goes a long way with regards to their overall well-being in healthcare, not just for the disease that you're taking care of. So I think lifting the spirits whenever and wherever you can is the most important thing. I enjoy seeing patients, I enjoy that patient interaction and I'm blessed with the ability to be an administrator but also be able to continue to care for patients. So it's making a difference whether it's for a patient, a family or the hospital is really what drives me in every day.