 My name is Dr. Bosher. I'm a G1 oncologist and I base most of my practice out of Riverview Medical Center. I do G1 oncology cancers which basically are vulva, vaginal, cervical, uterine, a floating tube, ovarian, and primary peritoneal tumors. Each patient that we have, we diagnose a new cancer. We present them at what we call a tumor board conference where we have medical oncologists, G1 oncology myself, a radiologist, a pathologist, and a geneticist available to review the case and to come up with a treatment plan for each patient. So that's basically how we prospectively address these cases and plan a treatment that can be sometimes rather complex for these cancers. In addition, for certain cancers, we also bring into play the palliative care, subspecialty, and as I said before, the geneticists. Cancer is curable if you catch it early. And so I think early detection is critical in curing cancer. If we can get the public to know more about warning signs, it would be better for them because we can get the patients in earlier to get effective treatment. What makes practicing a hack-and-sack meridian different and more special is that we do have the subspecialties available to treat these patients. As stated before, we have the tumor board conference where we have the different subspecialties available. Pathology, radiology, radiation oncology, medical oncology. We have the geneticists. We have palliative care. We also have nurse navigators now available that help get the patients through their treatment and to navigate them through their treatment that sometimes is confusing for the patient. The thing I like most about my job is the interaction with the patients. As far as what I'd like to pride myself in is to make the patients experience in the clinic one that's a friendly environment that they look to as coming back to friends. And I want my people that are working for me in the clinic to know the patients, the patients that know them so that they feel very comfortable when they do come here for their treatment or for their exams. I think that's important for patients to feel comfortable in that setting because they're going through a very difficult time in their life.