 Head and neck cancer is a very complex disease process. It involves structures that are important to daily living. For example, your tongue. You use it to talk. You use it to taste. It requires a very multidisciplinary team approach. Comprehensive Cancer Center, what it means to you is that you have multiple doctors and team members who are there to support you and care for you. A patient sits in a seat and we have, myself as a surgical oncologist, a radiation oncologist and a medical oncologist all come to you as a patient to develop a cancer program that is unique and specific to your cancer and your goals of care. We focus very specifically on their disease from diagnosis to treatment and after care. And we spend a lot of time with one another to make certain that we understand who we're treating and it's not just a disease, but we're treating an individual and the background of that individual is taken into consideration. Having the ability to engage with a multidisciplinary team like we have at Maryland and the combination of these doctors together meeting once a week or even twice a week to discuss your case in depth. That considers opportunities such as clinical trials that might be a really exciting opportunity for a particular patient and their disease, whether it be rare or common. That multidisciplinary component is essential to the success for any patient. A meeting of the minds to figure out the best way to treat you I think is why patients are best served by coming to the University of Maryland.