 Hi, my name's Ben Jones. I'm a second year D.P.I.L. student here with the Health Systems Collaborative. I'm a junior doctor from Australia and that's where my research is based. I'm studying a disease called rheumatic heart disease, which is an entirely preventable disease of childhood that can lead to early mortality. Australia has some of the highest rates of rheumatic heart disease in the world and one of the biggest challenges with rheumatic heart disease is the detection and monitoring of the disease. So our innovative solution is to train community health care workers to do the echo screening on other community members so that they are able to detect and monitor the disease within the community so that care can be provided on country. And specifically within this project, my role is to look at well how can we move this innovative research method from research into a fully fledged public health intervention. And part of the things that we need to learn along that journey are things like well who does it work for, why does it work, how does it work for them so that it can be scaled up and used in different circumstances. One of the other things that I'm looking at is well can this model of task sharing with local community health workforce be used as a broader solution to Australia's rural health workforce crisis? The approaches that I'm using to conduct this research implementation science research methodology specifically using things such as realist evaluations and theories of change to really unpack and understand this issue and all the nuances.