 My name is Louise King and I'm a surgeon. I came to medicine from law, so when I started medical school I had a background as a lawyer and I worked in constitutional criminal law and indigent legal access. I, as a lawyer, was working with bioethicists on some issues that were coming up for various clients that I had in the indigent clinics. I realized very quickly that the background that I had in law and in analysis of difficult questions was perfectly applicable to the questions that arise in bioethics. I teach a course on reproductive ethics. So we're going to talk a lot about all the different issues that come up in the setting of women's health and specifically as it relates to their reproductive capabilities, making them unique within our population. I specialize in minimally invasive surgical options for women. We're going to talk about all the different aspects ethical questions that come up in the setting of assisting women and their partners with reproduction. Some of those questions can be as simple as the techniques themselves and what they mean for the couples and what it means for a physician to be participating in that act. It also comes down to who has access to these reproductive technologies. We're going to discuss some of the newer issues that are coming up in the setting of genetics. The setting of genetic screening and newer technologies and genetics that affect the way we approach reproductive technologies and what's available now, what might be available in the future and frankly what should be available. We're going to talk about disclosure and young women and women who want birth control but are young and have issues in terms of disclosure their parents and there's a huge gamut of issues that come up for women in ethics that I'm very excited to talk to them about. Thank you.