 a good nutritional care, it is very important in order to fight against the disease. Let's say to give time to the body to build the immune system and then to give the time to recover itself. So if we don't provide the best nutritional care we can, then it is more difficult for the person, let's say, to fight against the disease. Every patient was receiving the same nutritional treatment, the same diet, while you have many patients that have many difficulties to swallow, you have patients that have short throat, you have patients with very little appetite. So with all these assessments, then you decide if the patient needs a solid diet, can eat a normal diet, or he needs a soft diet, or he needs a liquid diet. So when the patient needs this chart, they are part of a list, and then the ICRC is using this list to entitle this survivor to the CAST transfer program. It's not going to be difficult, it's a very simple question. I'm a survivor of Ebola, and I control this viral. When I went in rescue of a little child who have lost every member of his family, I'm going to bar some clothes because I destroy some of my clothes, I need a lot of food, I need to build myself, and I want to go back on the ambulance to help my lab brothers and sisters. We thought that it would make much more sense to empower them to give them the dignity to decide, make their own choices, decide if they want to allocate this money to food, or to something different, and we also hope and we trust that this will also help them start small businesses, or restart the small businesses that were hit very hard by the crisis, and that will allow them long term economic security, or at least improve the economic security. I'm going to start selling in this money, to start supporting my children, to eat, wear clothes, sleepers and things. As many years I don't have clothes, sleepers, all my things. We have a mechanism in place to do a regular follow up and monitoring where they are, and on a daily basis, on a monthly basis, to ensure and make sure that the money that is given in, they use it wisely. When I went in the community, the same people I've been assisting before in the community. When they see me coming, they refuse to, even the very day I enter the area, they refuse to go and when in the market, they go and buy food, up to now. When I go in the market, I say I want better, but they can't hold the money. They say I get Ebola. So at night, you see, even I walk in the street, people point their finger at me. Yeah, the Ebola patients and when my children walk in, they point their finger at them. The steam mark is not easy. We don't want people to continue to be dependent on people for assistance, but we think we can help them. And to the beneficiaries, we want them to use their money wisely. Let them use their money wisely, it is very important. And because for now, we are doing this program in Montserrado County. Let's see what the future will bring.