 I'm Andrew Genus. I'm the Co-Chief of Gastrointestinal Oncology at the John Thorough Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center. Myself and my colleagues, we care for patients with all types of gastrointestinal malignancies. So anything from esophageal cancer to colon cancer, pancreatic cancer, liver cancer, you name that. And we see patients at all stages of diagnosis. I really think the John Thorough Cancer Center is a really special place. It has a very unique combination of really outstanding clinical care. You really have, you know, world-class physicians taking care of patients directly. We have a very strong research program. We do a lot of, you know, novel and innovative care that would only be accessible at other big academic medical centers and not at community centers. Successful therapy first and foremost starts with that relationship where the physician and the patient and the family are all on the same page. And I think if a patient understands what's wrong with them and then what we're trying to do to help them, that goes a long way towards success. When my patients need opinions from other specialists, we can get them virtually, we can get them within the context of the tumor board, we can get them because of my close relationships with those physicians over the phone, and then obviously ultimately with face-to-face consultations. I think another very important key to patient success that we really pride ourselves at at JTCC is you have to look at the individual patient when you're making decisions. We should always remember that we're treating the patient, we're not treating an illness or a cancer stage. You know, cancer care is not recipe-driven. It may sound like it's recipe-driven and many cancer centers will focus on the recipe, but you really have to individualize those recipes, if you will, to the given individual. And now we're in the forefront of molecular medicine where we're starting to better understand the unique differences among patients and their cancers, which is, I think, going to throw the whole recipe concept of treatment out the window. And what I've seen with my colleagues and within the cancer center is there really has been this drive to become a truly world-class cancer center in what started out as, to be fair, you know, a small community oncology practice. And the people that work here are really driven to making this place as good as it can possibly be. And I frankly think that in terms of clinical care, we'll match toe-to-toe with any cancer center in the country, period.