 Okay, first lieutenant Corinne Swarbrick and for a second FST and I'm a critical care nurse. C-O-R-I-N and then last name S-W-A-R-B-R-I-C-K. We are teaching massive hemorrhage control to the Fijian Army and to some of the New Zealand Army. It's part of a larger training called T-C-C which is the Army's tactical combat care course that we teach all of our medics and so we teach it to them as well so we can kind of get the goal here is to train them enough that they can go back and train their soldiers back home. So have you had the chance to work in a joint situation like this before or work with other nations? So this is the first time I've done this like for like AT or anything. I did deploy to Afghanistan and we train with some of the Afghanistan soldiers, but this is the first time doing it with Australia, New Zealand and Fiji. Okay, what's your impression so far of Operation Heart Wheel? I think it's pretty cool. I think they're super smart. I know they kind of just went through a course as similar as this but I think this is awesome and I think it's kind of cool to see the way everyone does things even a little bit different but still the same on stage. It's kind of cool. What's been the biggest unexpected success so far from all of this? Like something that has probably surprised you about what's that about? Honestly, yesterday when we were teaching tourniquets for the first time we learned a lot from the Fijian medics that kind of taught us how to put on tourniquets a different way than what we have been taught traditionally. So that was kind of the first moment where I was like oh wow that was actually kind of like different and maybe a little faster in certain instances so that's kind of the first moment where I was surprised. Okay, that's great. So you want there to be two points of pressure from two different angles here to get your best pressure. And we also don't want the pressure to go down. We want it to go up and in because that's how we're going to get the tour. And so when I finish, I have all the scars. I'm going to put this roll here because it works similar to the Israeli bandage in the sense that all the stuff that I have here holds a lot of pressure. It's hard. And she also, like her fingers probably will go numb. This is a tourniquet, not a pressure dressing. It's a tourniquet. So you can help around, help cover. You can already start to see that dressing. You don't want too much down to your shoulder. You know, absolutely. This one you'll have a lot of pressure. I know that sometimes your patient may drop their pressure, like their blood pressure and that's just really tough stuff because we kill them ourselves.