 So, Janneke, the reason we want to talk with you, and I have the great honor of doing this, is every year the Patient Safety Movement Foundation gives out some humanitarian awards. This year, we're giving three out, and you are the winner of one of them. And so I'm very open to give this to you. You have the Steve Morrow Humanitarian Award. You're the winner of that. And Steve Morrow, you may have met because he was a board member, and unfortunately he died of cancer in 2017. I remember. Ever since. And to qualify, nominees must exemplify individuals who are actively working to improve patient safety within their health system through their leadership with a site of zero preventable deaths by 2020. Well, you absolutely meet that. I can't think of where I haven't seen you around the globe where you've been talking about patient safety. You know, you're from Trondheim, Norway, past president of the World Federation of Society of Anesthesiologists, president of Patient Safety and Quality Movement of the European Society of Anesthesia. You're the driving force behind the Helsinki Declaration on Patient Safety in 2010. You've been a great patient safety advocate throughout your years and being on the board of the Patient Safety Movement Foundation since 2016. You've got the great honor of being awarded the Knight of St. Olaf's Order last year from the country of Norway, phenomenal. And we're very honored. I'm very honored to get to this award. It will come to you soon. I don't know if you can see my camera, but I'm going to show you this is the award here. And it'll be on your doorstep fairly shortly. And we hope we can get it to you in person. Maybe next year if you have a meeting in person. So, Janneke, thank you so much for all you've been doing. I know you're the lead keynote speaker at a meeting in June with the European Society, the American Society and ISQUA in Milan on Patient Safety. It's just phenomenal what you're doing. So there's nobody more deserving of this award than you. Thank you so much. Wow. This was totally unexpected for me. I have to pinch my arm to see that I'm not dreaming this. I mean, totally unexpected. What a great, great honor. And it's very special in particular to receive the award named after Steve Moreau, which I had the honor to meet on several occasions and who sadly passed away too early. And he has also been an inspiration for me while I myself have been sick as well, and it's always good to have people to inspire you when you are working both in patient safety and in personal life. So giving me, awarding me this special award means particularly much to me. The honor is ours. We're just so honored to give it to somebody so deserving because you're the epitome of global patient safety. But it's true that all of us who are involved in the Patient Safety Movement Foundation, we are passionate about what we are doing. And you can feel how all when the group comes together, how we are improving at each other's energy level and want to do something because we really see the mission of what we can do. And as we have discussed before, for me being involved in anesthesiology, we know that five out of seven billion people in this world do not have access to safe and affordable anesthesia and surgery. And that's not only in the poorer countries, or even in the richer countries, we lose too many lives due to unsafe care, not only in anesthesia and surgery, but all fields of healthcare. And what I feel, as you have heard me say a billion or a zillion times, is that the way we work together in this movement, coming together all stakeholders to improve patient safety and to save those unnecessary lost lives, it feels so purposeful. What could be more purposeful in medicine than what we are doing together? Absolutely. So thank you so much for what you continue to do. And this is just a little recognition to thank you of what you've done so far. And I know you're going to continue with the same enthusiasm that you have, which is more enthusiastic than I think than anybody I've ever met. I mean, we know when Yannick is in the room and we know you're supportive and it's just wonderful to be working with you, it really is. Excuse me, do you have a mirror? So go see yourself in the mirror and you will see what inspiration looks like. Thank you so much.