 Ten years ago, my wife asked me, why are you going to go into, she was a pediatrician, she would joke with me. She's like, why do you want to go into stroke? It's either asthma or plavix. So back then the treatment wasn't as advanced as it is now. It was more than asthma and plavix, but it wasn't as advanced. Similarly with neurology, the treatment options were not there. We were known to make diagnoses, but the treatment options were not there. But now the treatment has gone to a totally different approach. And only way that's possible is with the technology. Technology has enabled us to diagnose things much more accurately, much faster, and also been able to help us treat these patients. So Tinectoplase is a relatively newer medication that's been given to our stroke patients. It's a cloud-busting medication. We've been using it now pretty frequently. We feel that this really has changed the paradigm for stroke, where patients are getting much better treatment, much more efficient way of busting the clot. We do intervention, neurointervention as well. So we see a lot of these patients that have gone to Tinectoplase, when we go in to do the procedure, there's no clot to open up because it's already been done. One thing we have at JFK that other places don't have is a surgical theater. Patients actually are able to visualize what we want to explain in 3D. For example, if there's an aneurysm that we are planning to treat, we can show the patients with virtual reality 3D image where the aneurysm is, what the aneurysm looks like, and how we're going to approach the treatment process. 20 years ago, even just visualizing the diagnostic imaging compared to now, it's so much more advanced. You can see every small little thing that you were not able to see before. I was talking to Dr. Kramani actually, I was like, what's going to happen in the next 10 years? So the thing that advancement in technology is going to be the game changer. And so it'll make everything so much easier for the physicians procedure-wise. It's going to make the lives of patients better.