 Palliative care really encompasses hospice care, comfort care, paint management. It's not only for the dying patient, it's also for enhancing the quality of life of all patients. It's sort of everything that you're already doing in medicine every day and then adding, trying to figure out the nuances of who a person is, how they come to their own decision, what their goals are, what their understanding is, what their expectations are. It's something that's been around for many years, but it's finally starting to, I think, gain a lot more acceptance and especially now with Fairfield U, we're really honing in on how important it is. We should be having conversations with our patients about their wishes and what they would want out of their life and what quality of life means to them. Instead of us telling them what we think they should be doing, we're finally asking them what do they want. The education at Fairfield has always been very holistic and not just focused on the disease but on the patient, the family and the whole network of caring. I think that, to me, speaks a lot to the Jesuit philosophy and being able to be there for my patient. There's not a day that goes by that I do not feel that I made a difference in somebody's life and I can't possibly put into words how powerful that really is.