 Originally, I had a spot on my nose that had started to develop, and it was kind of started off as a little dry spot of skin. It would go away for a little bit. It would come back. In Dan's case, he noticed a spot that wasn't healing on his nose, and it became concerning, and it was even growing. At that point is when I knew I needed to go get it checked. The dermatologist generally does the biopsy of any suspicious lesion, and anything that requires surgical intervention then gets sent to a surgical subspecialist. And they got follow-up appointments scheduled, and got the biopsy done that first visit, and I believe the results I got back were within a day or two. Basil cell carcinoma is a very slow-growing cancer. However, the quicker we treat it, the better the treatment will ultimately be. I never felt when I was going to talk to nursing staff or doctors that it was something that couldn't be handled and taken care of. And so, his tumor had a chance to grow, encompassing about half of his nose, and we had to rebuild him that half of the nose and make it as natural appearing as possible. It was pretty overwhelming when I got the mirror for the first time before they actually relocated. It did the graft. And Dan and I sat down and discussed all possible reconstructions. And so, he knew exactly how we were going to fix it. He tells me that his colleagues professionally and his friends and family say that it looks amazing, and they don't even notice it. I think everybody that I've come into contact with Kaiser has been very nice to deal with. They're very knowledgeable about what the process for every step is. They're very good about getting you unplugged in with the right care that you need for the specific things that you need. And they take care of business.