 Hi, I'm Dr. Seanan Terry. I serve as the medical director for the Baltimore City Cancer Program and also the senior medical advisor for community outreach and engagement. Those are both programs from the University of Maryland Green and Bomb Comprehensive Cancer Center, really that focus on the community in terms of cancer control. So we have all kinds of success stories. The Baltimore City Cancer Program has done over 36,000 no-cost cancer screenings. We've diagnosed over 160 people with cancer, the majority of which are cancer survivors today. The first patient that we diagnosed with cancer was a breast cancer patient. She's still a member of our program 20 years later, and she's one of our biggest cheerleaders. And we are a program that focuses on providing education and no-cost screening for breast cervical and colorectal cancer for individuals in Baltimore City and the immediately surrounding area who may not have insurance or who are underinsured. We really walk folks through the continuum from just understanding why cancer screening is important all the way through survivorship. So if a person ultimately is diagnosed with cancer, making sure they have the support and the resources that they need. The Office of Community Outreach and Engagement is tasked with making sure that community members are able to communicate with members in the cancer center, specifically researchers, so that researchers are able to talk to the community to understand what their priorities are in cancer and community members are able to talk to researchers to say what their priorities are and that we can meet somewhere in the middle to make sure that everyone is working together, working collaboratively and are essentially on the same page to make cancer outcomes better for our community.