 Hi, I'm Yair Kissen. I'm vice chairman of the department of orthopedic surgery here at Hackensack University Medical Center. As a physician, I think the most important thing is to focus on the patient and I try my best to put myself in the patient's shoes and understand that they're coming to me, for me, for orthopedic surgery. It's usually because they're in pain. Pain can make a person not sleep. Pain can make a person angry, certainly make them depressed. And if I have the ability to potentially change that for them, to the best of my ability, if I can, I will. Surgery for me is generally speaking a last option. We always start with things that are non-surgical. If a person is a little worried, a little bit nervous about having an operation, I tell them that's totally normal. It's normal to be nervous and that you will tell me when it's time to do your elective knee replacement, etc. I strive and I really pride myself on being able to guide patients to make the right choice for them to get better. And if their choice and my choice are not the same, I'll work with you. And it's our job and my job, I think, as a physician to educate patients on what their right options are to get better.