 A lot of our roles as physicians is informed by, you know, kind of the previous history of the profession and of course there was a time in which doctors routinely lied to their patients that was viewed as part of our professional responsibility and of course I think we've all been socialized in reaction to that. So you know, I think that that is a prohibition again, at least with patients who retain decisional capacity that I think we would all respect as a matter of professional responsibility. As I alluded to before, you know, sometimes where things get complicated are, you know, particularly with patients who are sort of borderline capacity and we may be asked by a patient's family members to collude in certain ways or it may be a simple as, hey, you know, I get phone messages or voicemails from caregivers, let's say, you know, we have an appointment coming up. I want to tell you some things about what's been going on at home so you know, but I don't want you to tell, you know, the patient that we had this conversation, right? And that's a tricky one when we're communicating about someone's clinical status without their knowledge, right? So ordinarily we wouldn't be permitted to participate in this omission at least if not outright fiction. And so that's a tricky kind of situation or, you know, if we're asked by family members, you know, like, we don't use the term Alzheimer's disease or dementia and we say you're just going to go see the doctor, you know, when you go to the memory clinic. And so I think those are sometimes the trickier situations where it's not that we are creating the fiction or the omission but we're being asked, you know, to participate in it. I think my responses do often depend on, you know, my judgment of the patient's capacity. So I've had cases where I've had to tell family members, you know, I don't feel comfortable withholding that information at this state, you know, or, you know, I may need to ask permission to have this conversation with you. And then, you know, there are stages, you know, later in disease where, you know, that's just sort of an understanding that we're not going to have that conversation in front of the patient because it's too distressing. So it is a bit situational and in my mind, you know, and this is my understanding of my professional and legal responsibilities, it does, it is framed around the concept of decisional capacity.