 When I was a kid, I didn't want to go to school. I didn't want to go to school. I had to go to school. I was 20 years old. I didn't want to go to school. We didn't want to go to school. I didn't know how to respond to our treatment. But we hope that he would. And so we actually started a standard MDRTB treatment for him. We didn't have any tests to determine whether or not he had extensively drug resistant TB. Whether he was sensitive to the medications we had, kind of what the picture was. suspicion or what following him and then of course just using what we have and so initially when we started him on treatment he actually became better. You know he started to gain weight. His fever's lessened, his cough decreased, the sputum decreased and then actually at one point his sputum AFB smear became negative and so we were relieved initially that okay he is responding to treatment and he is going to get better but his culture sputum culture which is what we rely on never became negative and then a few months into the treatment actually his sputum smear became positive again and so that's when we knew that we had a probably an extensively drug resistant TB case on our hands and we're really obviously concerned by that. Medications that we eventually got because of our coordination with the IOM and help from the the Global Fund and yeah you know help from Dr. Seifel those medications they are they're available they're new newly being used as drugs for extensively drug resistant TB they weren't they'd never been used in Jordan we'd never been able to procure them or even tried to procure them in Jordan. Silly, I'm fussy, I'm not silly. There's no such thing as being silly. I don't know where to sell them. I'm too burdened by them. I'm burdened by them but I don't know where to sell them. I don't know where to sell them.