 Hi, my name is Dr. Yasmin Shabazz. I'm the Chief Cardiovascular Medicine Fellow and in my sixth year of postgraduate medical training here at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. I would say if there is one word that describes our fellowship, it would be that it's fellow-centric. Not only do we have a wide array of pathologies that we see here from a very large catchment area, we see an array from interventional and electrophysiology procedures to advanced heart failure, including mechanical circulatory support, ventricular assist devices, transplantation, but we also see bread and butter cardiology, including acute coronary syndrome and heart failure. And not only is the breadth of the disease that we see very large, but it's also high quality. The fellows are intimately involved in the entire process from evaluation of patients to work up and the thought process all the way to implementation of the treatment of disease. Procedures typically do not start without the fellow involvement. By the end of your first year in fellowship, you'll be comfortable performing right-heart catheterizations on your own. By the end of your second year in fellowship, you'll be comfortable doing left-heart catheterization, diagnostic left-heart catheterizations on your own in addition to transesophageal echoes. And in your second year of fellowship, while at the Veteran's Hospital, you're essentially the only cardiologist that's there reading echoes, doing consults, and running the primary cardiology team over there. And in your third year of fellowship, really you hone your skills and refine your skills as you get ready to enter into the world of cardiology. I think here in our fellowship, in the area, we are known for producing clinically well-trained cardiologists and really look forward to training even more.