 Quite often we are ended over digital technologies and ask those doctors to go with it and to try to do our best. We are being asked to operate in a world that we were not trained for. The landscaping in primary care is changing a lot, and what we can see, especially in the context of technology, is that patients are more and more involved. And we really don't need to ask them to use technology because technology is the place where they are. From my experience working in a range of organizations with young family doctors, from a training perspective, I sometimes feel really unprepared when someone asks me, so what is the impact of this on my health? Is it something that can help me? They are asked to do video consultations and telephone consultations and really, we don't have the training, they don't have the training and we don't have the support that we need. So we actually want to bridge this gap in medical education and that's okay for the need of better training in digital technologies. When they ask us, look, I have this smartwatch, I have this app, how can I best use it to manage my health and my disease?