 Sure, Colonel Michael F. Bolinky. It's spelled B-E-L-E-N-K-Y. Sure, so hospital hospice stands for hospital exercise, and for us it's a validation exercise for our unit as part of Defender 21. Sure, so the purpose of our hospice as part of Defender 21 is to truly validate this unit in our training stance as we converted previous this last year from the 212th Combat Support Hospital to the 519th Hospital Center, the 512th Field Hospital, and the 167th Medical Augmentation Detachment. It's our first chance to finally do our collective training and a great chance to train with our partners and our sister service in the United States Air Force. So the validation is two parts. So the first is United States Army validation that we are T in our ability to do our mission essential tasks. And the second part is our NATO evaluation, and that we can be certified as a role to enhanced for the NATO forces. So for this exercise, we have seven different nations that are involved, both embedded within the hospital and primarily from the German Bundeswehr, the 2nd Center Stop Regiment. But we have a total of seven nations that include the nations within NATO for the medical evaluation. So this exercise in a real-life scenario allows us to train truly our bread and butter and to receive and treat casualties and to perform and validate that we can do damage control resuscitation, damage control surgery, and then look to hold for at least 72 hours, if not more, in our intensive care unit, in our intermediate care wards. So this allows us to do our real-world job in a training environment. It allows our nurses, our providers, our medics, our LPNs, our supply personnel, and the entire team to work as one team in a field environment. No. No, not at all. So for the exercise, we started this planning easily a year ago, and then we had a deliberate change, originally going to Hungary, and change around April 3rd to come to Bomb Holder due to some certain COVID response options and other things going on. So this is definitely a permanent temporary structure. It can be moved. It can be mobile. And it takes it roughly anywhere from one to four days from initial operating capability to full operating capability set up. So, yeah, of the prospects. So the main objective for the hospital exercise is to validate our post-transformation training with our new equipment and our new personnel structure. So changing from the 212th Combat Support Hospital to three separate units under a force design update, we became the 519th Hospital Center and Mission Command Headquarters, the 512th Field Hospital, a 32-bed Roll 3, and then the 167th Medical Augmentation Detachment, a 32-bed ICU, ICW, and Medical Specialty Care Unit. So it's a chance for us to train as a new structure, new equipment, and a new personnel layout post-transformation. Sure. I would say the only thing I would add, this has been the first large training exercise we've done as post-COVID. So it's been a great chance for us not only to train as a unit, but us for to train with our German partners. From day one, they've been integrated within the staff and been meshed in like they were naturally signed teammates from day one. So it's been a great exercise for us and hopefully we can continue this in the future. Absolutely. So approximately, so COVID mitigations, we have an effect. We had random temperature checks throughout. Approximately 83% of the unit is vaccinated that came out here. Those that were not vaccinated have had pre-COVID tests. They're all negative before we departed. And today we just did their post-COVID tests and they're all negative before we depart.