 Okay, so that was culturally. How about medicine? What's the main thing that you notice is different between the United States and India as far as medicine goes? So the way the practice, the way our doctor practices here in the U.S. and there in India is a bit different. The medical knowledge or the algorithms or protocols which you follow is the same thing. It's not going to change. Oh, same? Yeah, they are the same. Like, how do you diagnose a case of heart failure? It will remain the same. It's not going to change. It's not going to change. Yeah, it's not going to change. You guys do the heart story, you guys do the centaur, you guys do everything is the same. Yes, that's the same thing. It's not going to change. That's refreshing. But the thing that changes is how we practice it. So in India, I'm not talking about the private hospitals, the big private hospitals, but the majority of the hospitals where you go, the doctor have their cabin and the patients come in, like the patients have to visit the doctor. The doctor examines the patient, they take the history, they diagnose, they treat the patient. And the patient, now the patient goes, a second patient comes in. So the doctor has a cabin and the patient is the one who come in and get examined and go. Why is that so different here? And here in the U.S. it's completely opposite. Patients have their own cabin, like there are 10 offices. The patient sits there, the doctor would come in. The doctor goes from patient to patient. Why is it like that? I'm not sure, but this is the first thing, which I experienced here after coming here. I was amazed. We go there, we have to visit the patient in their offices. So that doesn't change how you practice. That's just the setup of the practice, which is very different from back at home in India. That's interesting. So for those of you that practice here in the United States, can you imagine that? You just sit in your office with your exam table, your all of your tools, and then the patients are the ones that come in. You're not knocking on the door and coming into their room. They're coming in to see you. So in some of the private hospitals, as I said earlier, there are some of the private hospitals, the big private hospitals, they have this system like U.S. where a patient gets their own office and the doctor goes and visits them. So there is one of the infrastructure or foundational thing, but the way doctor practices is the same thing. There's nothing different in that way they practice. The availability of the latest techniques, like there are these hospitals, they have bleeding as they are doing some research in finding new techniques to treat or to diagnose. The India or any other developing nation, they are like still developing those things. They are not at the bleeding edge of that. We are still developing on that. We are just following or we are still exploring all these things. U.S. is ahead of everyone right now in the field of healthcare. In the field of surgical management or surgery, Germany or the Europe, they are on the bleeding edge. They are on the top of there. Every nation has their own benefit or own advantage of being ahead in something. The doctors in India, they examine up to 100 patients a day. Up to 100 patients a day. In the government setting, if you see some practices, they might see even more than that, 150 in one day. So that's the thing. If you practice in India, if you practice in a government setup, government hospital, you will be skilled enough that you will be able to see all these patients and get the things right. Most of the times, like I would say 95 or 99 percent, 95 percent of the times, that you are to the point and you are diagnosing and treating perfectly. So 100 patients a day. That happens. If you go to a government setting, that's how it is. Let me ask you this. Do you document? Documentation is the key thing. No matter how many patients you see, you have to do like those doctors, they are passed at everything. Examining, documentation, history-taking, treating, everything. How do you examine, make a treatment plan, see, discuss, be with 200 patients a day, and also document? So that's a skill that never goes over time. Nobody on the first day would be able to do that. And that's not a single doctor is going to do that. That's a team of doctors, like three or four doctors, would be going up all these patients in the entire nutrition. So it's not 200 per doctor? No, no, no. No, it's like 40 per doctor? 40 or 50. Okay, that's what I'm seeing at urgent care now, and I'm slow. Okay, yeah. Okay, I was about to say 200 is, no. I've heard of people doing 90 in a 12-hour shift. Not 200. But so that's between a team of physicians. Yes. So you're seeing like 40, 50 sometimes? Yes. Okay, that's totally believable. I've seen that. I've done that. Oh, and that's believable. But you still have to document everything. Okay, I was about to say, no, 200 that's impossible. No, that's impossible. Because if an individual is seeing 200 per day, then there is a lot of chance that you are getting something wrong. Exactly. Exactly. Because you're missing on documentation, you're misdiagnosing, or something can get wrong. Something's wrong. Yeah, because that's just... And we never want to compromise healthcare at the cost of just... For turnover. Yes. Yeah, which a lot of practices do kind of want to do. We call it a meek, right? It's the worst metaphor ever. But they call it practices that do that. They just want you to see as many as you possibly can and they don't care about the quality of care. They call that a meek, right? Because they just want to get in and out, see and get the money and they don't care. And so that people that care about other people's health care, their whole reason we're doing this, it's very difficult for folks like that to work in that environment. Yeah. So yeah, that's why when I heard 200 a day, I was like, okay, since you want to divide it by five, you got to 40 in it. Okay, still a lot, but much more manageable. Okay, and it's interesting that you said that Germany and I guess the rest of Europe is more on the cutting edge. Surgery. Surgery are here. Yes. Also. So two of my, like one of my batch men and one of my seniors, they are like, they want to go to surgery as well, like residency in surgery. So they were also looking for options and they came up with like Europe, like Germany. They have the best surgical residency or the surgical future. Really? Yeah, they are on the bleeding edge, like in the robotic surgeries and the AI. The AI is just evolving. But regarding robotic surgery, they were like keen on getting into robotic surgery. So they are pursuing residency. Like one of them is pursuing a residency. One of them is still in her way. So yeah. That's a venture about you for that? Yes. Is that from Germany? I'm not sure about that, but I like, I got the insight about surgical residency being best in Germany from these people. Really? I never searched for the options for surgical residency because I didn't look forward for surgical residency. Sure. So yeah. I didn't know that. I mean, I guess it makes sense, German engineering. I just, I always thought, you know, as an American, we have the best, but obviously not. You know, some of the world does things way better than we do. So that's interesting. We definitely have the most expensive, perhaps they have the best. And that is the reason collaborating in medicine is better for every nation and everyone around here. For the patients, for the doctors, collaboration is the best thing which we can do. Like we can expand our knowledge, we can exchange our thoughts, we can exchange our technology and exchange the way we treat patients. Yeah. So what would you say is the best here? You said like cardiology training would be the best in the United States. Yes. Why is that? Is that because of the medications we have, because of the institutions, the training? Why is it better? And then why is surgery better in Germany? I don't have any good answer for that. No, it's okay. But the education in general I would say in the U.S. it has a lot to offer to people who want to pursue like future in medicine. The U.S. has a good education system and infrastructure and technology to offer here in the U.S. for medicine. Interesting. I didn't know that. I mean I knew the U.S. especially for certain specialist degrees, medicine included was kind of top of the line. A lot of people from different countries come here. Go to any college town, Syracuse included, around the college you'll see tons of very expensive vehicles from all the foreign money sending their kids. Oh yeah. I'm sure that happens in other countries too but it happens here at every single major university. So U.S. education, believe it or not, higher education is still top notch in a world class. So that's good to hear. We're doing something right. That's very encouraging. Yeah. Okay. And I guess we're going to skip 7 and 8, correct? Yeah. We're skidding at those. Okay. Sorry you guys don't get to hear answers to 7 and 8. We decided to not discuss these things.