 Hello. My name is Helen Haskell. I am president of Mothers Against Medical Arrow, which is a South Carolina organization focused on patient safety and quality and primarily on patient engagement and patient safety and quality. I started this organization 20 years ago, when after my young son, Lewis, died in the South Carolina hospital from failure to rescue, I viewed his death as partly resulting from a failure of education. Lewis himself was an outstanding student, one of the top students in the state, and we focused a lot on education in the wake of his death. One of the things we did was to create the Lewis Blackman Awards, which were given for many years at the annual South Carolina Patient Safety Symposium. We had a luncheon and awards were given not just to students, but to a number of people who had achieved change in patient safety and quality in South Carolina. But my favorite and most important one to me was always the student award because it felt closest to my son Lewis and was closest to my heart. In 2021, we transitioned this award to the Patient Safety Movement Foundation, where we have been pleased to give out national awards to students and residents across the country, national and even international. So this year's award goes to a South Carolina student, I am pleased to say, named Ingrid Bonilla, who is a student at the Medical University of South Carolina. She's a fourth year medical student who has recently matched at Texas Children's Hospital. We're very proud of her for that. I'm very pleased to welcome her as the recipient of the Second Lewis Blackman Award at the Patient Safety Movement Foundation. So I want to tell you a little bit about Ingrid. She was born in Columbia, grew up in South Carolina and has been a is about to graduate from MUSC medical school. She's really as outstanding a candidate as we've ever had for the Lewis Blackman Award. She's taken her experience as an immigrant child of immigrant parents and used it to forge her own path in patient safety and quality. One of the things that she has done while she was a medical student at MUSC is she's worked with noted patient safety champions in South Carolina on new criteria for preventing central line infections and central line IBs. She has worked on collecting data on COVID-19 to determine its presentation and children and how it differs from adults and how children should be treated with COVID-19. She's worked on communication between patients, families and providers, which is the most basic building block of patient safety. And before that she worked on the biology and presentation of breast cancer. She's done a lot of laboratory work. She is a highly accomplished young woman. We're very proud to have her as our as our recipient for 2022 and have great hope for all the things she will accomplish at Texas Children's and Beyond. Congratulations Ingrid. Ms. Haskell, thank you so much. First of all, thank you so much for allowing me to represent this year's 2022 Blackman award. It is truly an honor to be able to represent this award and represent every single team member that has allowed me the opportunity to help change the culture of medicine for safer. Your story and your son's story is very powerful and it lives through this movement and it lives through the many lives that it continues to change. The fact that you were able to be such a testimony to unfortunately this tragic story, you've contributed to many lives that are being saved now. So thank you so much for being able to speak to our community. It's very nice to be able to see from the patient side you, Ms. Haskell, being able to be such an amazing voice for this community. And my hope is that as I move forward now into my next phase of training as a pediatric resident at Texas Children's Hospital that I can continue this movement for patient safety. I was very fortunate to be able to be a part of MUSC's team and collaborate in several projects from COVID to central lines, preventing blood clots and central lines to clinical trials. But my mission doesn't stop there. I hope to be able to be part of this community that you have helped establish to be able to prevent all the harm that certainly has affected many families, yours, mine and many others. So it's my hope that as I move forward as a resident and 20, 10 years down the road as an attending physician that together we can help make a better culture, a safer culture and truly prevent these stories from taking such a downward turn in the future. Thank you so much. I'm truly honored to be this year's recipient. Thank you, Ingrid. We will hold you to that promise to work with us and you will be receiving an award in the mail and also a $500 check from the Patient Safety Movement Foundation and Mother's Against Medical Era. Thank you. Congratulations and bon voyage. Godspeed in your future efforts. Thank you so much.