 There's been a lot of questions asked about the man here in Dallas that has Ebola and the apartment that he lived in and whether that apartment where he was safe for so long if that was still contagious. How many days later is it still contagious? That story intrigued me and I have to mention it now. It intrigued me when I saw it on TV that for one family, one person's infection, you had the fire force, you had the big cleaning agent, you had even the cars we are all covered. Then I saw it. I wonder how people feel if they were in Sierra Leone. When even we can count the number of doctors we have, we don't have up to 200 doctors in a country like Sierra Leone. We don't have up to 500 midwives or nurses. We don't even have majority of the people, let's say 40% or 60% of free time. We don't have pipe bomb water. If our government doesn't have enough personal protective care, they don't have enough of these barrier teams to go around. I wonder how if Americans went to Sierra Leone and they were told, the treatment center where they are treating these patients, with nothing. It was amazing when I saw that story. For one person, Pompeo Resources for a whole country, for Liberia, for let's say the four countries that are being involved, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Nigeria. That's just something to think about. But yet I think that we are told that the quarantine must last for 21 days. The house should be fumigated and closed after 21 days before it can be phase safe. Our people stay in their homes where nobody knows whether they can eat and they say they are quarantined. They don't have enough water, they don't have enough food. In a family with maybe like 10, you want household. It's amazing, isn't it? It is amazing. Yes. The virus had outside of the body. In the contamination of a home, moisture on the toilets, on the handles of the sinks and things like that, door knobs. How long would it take for that virus to disintegrate or to die? I think it lives longer in moisture. And the longer it stays in moisture, it can last for days. But as long as it's dry, and if you use the chemicals, the chlorine, it kills the virus. So the lady that was affected, she did say she was using Clorax to clean the surfaces in her house. For us, we just quarantine people for 21 days and assume that is all it's worth after. And we have not had any reports yet that people after the quarantine have had episodes or have been infected. They actually would test everyone who is quarantined for the virus. Yes, you can be re-infected. If you expose yourself again, surely you'll be re-infected. But you will have more antibodies then. Because your body, because your body develops antibodies, makes the person to be well to survive the infection. You see, I am comparing this with HIV. If we look back at HIV, we have the same methods, most of transmission, not so. We had the same messages we were given for HIV. The only difference with HIV is the sweat. Because nobody had told us that sweat carries HIV virus. But in this case, sweat carries Ebola virus. And that means you can contract it through the pores of your skin if you can go through sweat. That comes through from the pores of your skin. You see, that's the only difference. But it is hemorrhagic just like HIV is transmitted through body fluids. And if you are careless about vomit or feces or semen and that, you will get it. It's the same thing with Ebola. You see, that is the barrier. They go and pick the bodies up. And with no family members, take the bodies away to an unknown grave. So when we did the training, the bishops and the leaders, the religious leaders, they said we have to make a representation to governments to allow the religious leaders to at least accompany the barrier team to where their members are lead. So that they can say a prayer. They do not have to touch the... Because it's bad twice. The first would spray the body, then they bag it once, then spray, then they bag it a second time before it's taken. So it's really like fumigated before the person is taken to the grave. But it's like a common grave. Those who have been on the internet and have seen it, you may have seen the grave. I was very upset when I saw that grave because it's like a common grave. That too has its own implications. Because getting so many corpses in one area, and we have our weather system, the rains, the rainy season, and the major means of survival is farming. I'm just thinking of tomorrow. What is going to be the other implications of this? So we had made that appeal that the leader, the religious leader, to whichever denomination that person belong, be allowed and gowned and prepared to follow so that they can identify where the person is laid. That started to be done. Understanding in Liberia, they are cremating each and every one of those bodies. Yes, which is sensible. So you do not have that tomorrow? Yes, sir. Are there cultural customs that would discourage the cremation? Yes. That's why it's difficult. This is why Sierra Leone is so buried. But the ideal for Ebola patients, corpses, is to be burned. Because I read somewhere, somebody gave me the information that when they had Ebola epidemic in Uganda, in one of the villages they had to burn, even the houses. And that's how they were able to get rid of the virus from that community. But our cultural beliefs sometimes plays a part in the way we live and the way we address responses. These are victims. Those are the recent victims of Ebola. The gentleman is a medical doctor. Oh, sorry. A medical doctor, I understand from Uganda, was working with UN. And this is an RN, a registered professional nurse. She passed. She even took this picture as you can see in the world. And she too died to Ebola. To date, I'm sure we've lost over 150 health workers in Sierra Leone to Ebola. We've lost four doctors in a country where you don't have up to 100 doctors. So that's a big challenge. Now, what are the effects of Ebola on us? Health-wise, I don't have to explain that. It's devastating. People are not healthy. People are not having enough food. They're just barely surviving. There's not enough water supply. There's not enough food. Most people are depending on those who have families, places like America. Those of you who have families who are Srelinians, I'm sure you are getting calls. And people are telling you what they need. When you quarantine a family and you just go around and give them a bath soap. A bath soap. And tell that family of five to wash their hands 15 times a day. And they cannot even afford chlorine to put in their water. So we just say wash your hands any time. You use the bathroom. Develop, increase the culture of washing hands. Increase the culture of taking care of your personal hygiene. And even the children are taught that. Unfortunately, there's no economies going on. Almost all the companies, their staff have left. And left us. Except those countries that have now sent health workers to help us with the epidemic. So economy is at a standstill. Even the local markets where people take their vegetables. The community people find they bring their vegetables, their bananas, their pepper. Which they sell to survive has been stopped since June. People are not even visiting themselves. Socialist impact. We can't, we don't allow guests to come to us anymore. In our houses because we are not sure what they have. So those who have gates, their gates are closed. Yes. Somebody will call and say I want to visit you. No, don't visit me yet. Then when the government shut down the whole country, made it even worse, and they don't have enough resources to go around to give every family food that had been shut down. You see, people had to go out. They go to the market. They sell before they buy food for that day. That stopped. And even when the people died, they had corpses. They would call the hotline 117. And it would take like two days before they come to clear the corpse from the home. Socially, we are very antisocial of late. Yes. We are visiting people. Somebody will just get up. They don't have to call you. You see, they have arrived. And you are welcome. But no, not anymore. Even in vehicles, taxes, the government says taxes must take only three people at any one time. And the fear cost is so high. How can a business person use, instead of taking five, says three. For one trip. One in front of the car. Two on either side of the window. One person on either side of the window. For buses, you can only take six. So all that has grounded the whole economy. So when government says we are shutting down, we have already shut down before government shut us down. I even got a call this morning. It's like I'm here, but I'm working. I have to give supervision. I have to give ideas. I have to give input. This is why the church took the owners now to go from community to community. So anywhere where they have shut down the districts, the church sends teams to those districts to identify the homes that have been quarantined, the communities that have been quarantined to provide them with basic food, basic soap, you know, give them those buckets and teach them that they cannot give enough to tell them, okay, if you have the bowl, you can put the bowl here, put a cup and be used in that cup to wash your hands. Because we go very basic. We go very basic in our thoughts. So that education forgets it. Schools have been closed since June. Schools and colleges in all these countries have been closed since June. And this is where almost we are in October. So there's no education. There's no university education. The children are at home and imagine young people at home are not occupied. Forget about television. We don't have that. We don't even have electricity. Those who are fortunate to have generators. That is about six or seven dollars a gallon. How much? When I'm home, I use a gallon a day. And it's only for four hours. That's electricity I am. That's what I can provide. So sometimes when people email me and I don't respond like two days, they say, oh, wonder where Beatrice is? They don't even know I don't have electricity for that day. Sometimes the office, we don't have electricity. So those are some of the issues we're dealing with in Sierra Leone. We look to you. We are looking forward to you, the church. We want the pastors to speak about Ebola. We want every church to speak about Ebola in Sierra Leone and West Africa. That is the only way. We hope and we are praying. We continue to pray in all our hospitals. We pray every morning before work starts for this epidemic to be controlled. Because it has actually dealt with the very fabric of not only the individual, but our social life, every aspect of life Ebola has touched. So we are looking to this Almighty God. We know He made us. So we just believe that one day God will help us to be able to control these menace in our communities. Please help us to stop Ebola. Whatever resources you have, send it to UNCO, United Methodist Committee on Relief of the General Board of Global Ministries. It will be received. If you want to designate it to any country, it will be used for that country. If you want me to know, if you want the website, my email is there. If you want any information about me, you ask the general, even UNCO, because I work directly with Ted Warner, they will be able to give you my information. But I thank all of you. On behalf of the Sierra Leone Conference, United Methodist Church, I thank all of you for all your donations you have been making, for all the inputs you have made into the health program, especially the Imagine No Malaria. Can you imagine if we didn't have Ebola? Can you imagine an Ebola-free Sierra Leone? Education will work. Children will go to school. They will grow up to hear that there was Ebola and not to see Ebola. Can you imagine, Israeli, there was no Ebola? How much economic development will it have? We were just being proud to say, oh, we are getting rid of malaria. And then Ebola shows up. So thank you very much for listening. I will take a seat. Yes. The bats were the ones who carried it and infected other animals. The animals did not suffer pain. And did you say animals don't have any antibodies? No, they don't suffer disease. So they cannot develop. Do they die from it? Well, yes. The unfortunate thing we mentioned about animals, because that's one method of transmission. Of eating. So one of the messages is that avoid eating any animal. We have you call it bush meat. Yes. Do you know that they have the research of what they are doing as far as trying to find the antibody? Yes, here in the western world. In the US, in England, in Canada, they have come up with vaccines which they are trying. They are trying stages. We haven't heard what the outcomes have been. Yes. The vaccine. The vaccine. There's more Ebola in Liberia than Sierra Leone. And if so, how do you account for that? Well, one, the Ebola is escalated more in Liberia than Sierra Leone currently. Because of some mistakes that have been made. I mean, we have, it's the education. I don't think they have reinforced the education of not touching, doing hand washing. And resources. Those are some of the areas. They have availability of resources. We, as soon as it was declared Ebola in Sierra Leone, the first thing our Bishop did was to write to all our partners, please don't visit us until the epidemic is under control. I had teams planned to visit me for the health program. And I just wrote to the lady, please don't come, I will come. That's how I got myself in the US. I would have been back since September. But then it's so escalated. There was no Ebola in Freetown in July. And now Ebola is everywhere. So in Liberia, the stories we heard were devastating. There were state governments going home. And the resources are bigger. I don't know whether they reinforced this no touch or no hugging. Because they have their own issues. And as much as we are so similar in culture, even in food, each country has their own separate issues. And I think those are some of the things that we can think of. One thing he helped is our Bishop, John Yambas, who took it serious and got everybody together. All the faith communities. All the faith-based organizations. We got to get education now. Even the Muslims, we called all of them and said, look, when we had the civil war, it was the faith-based organizations that came together and said, we cannot continue war. So they said, we cannot see Ebola. We cannot allow Ebola to finish our people. So that's how we developed the religious leaders' task force in Ebola. And every Muslim, every faith in man, when they've reached their kutubas, the salmon, they will mention about Ebola. They will mention something on the prevention. We have made big banners and put it in big terms in all the districts so that even the school children read what the prevention messages are and take it home. Somebody told me this morning that 120 people died. Yes, this is because the education is reaching the majority of the people. Because at first people were in denial and they were keeping their sick people home instead of taking them to the treatment centers, to the hospitals. Now they know that there is treatment, there is some care available. So people are now coming forward and taking their people. It's unfortunate they are losing people still. But it's better than when they were kept home and they were hidden and they were infecting the whole lot of the others. But now they need more money. But now we have to have isolation centers in our hospitals. We just have hold in centers like one room where any suspects can be put there till the person is taken to the nearest treatment center. We need like vehicles from those hospitals so that at least when you have a suspect you don't sit and wait for government. You just take that person straight to the nearest treatment center which we shot in the time you will keep the person in the hospital. I was here one morning and they called me, sister, we have a gentleman who has worked to Kisi Hospital and said he's been exposed to Ebola and feels he thinks he's been infected. So I said to him, where is he right now? So they said he's at the gate. I said keep him at the gate. Please don't allow him to come into the hospital. Then we sent one of the nurses, the midwives, they took the infrared thermometer which you can use without touching the person. They did his temperature they called the 117 hotline and somebody came and he told you that man they took his blood and made a referral. That's the kind of thing we have been doing because if he had gone into that hospital and if he had proved to be positive, serious, this is a hospital that has over 100 people coming in there per day to be seen. So those are the issues. We need a lot of support. As I said, there's hunger now. People will say, Ebola is not killing us but the hunger is killing us. We need vehicles to be able to transfer. We need basic medications. And even there because those I could make only use once. So you need more almost all the time. Yes, sir. I'm overwhelmed and I honestly I don't know how to help specifically. I mean definitely I'm going to bring this up in church I'm definitely going to talk about this more but what specifics can I do to help because I feel helpless right now. If you have you can raise funds it's better you raise funds and send it to Unko instead of getting physical materials because if you send these materials to Unko the shipment because they too pay for shipment but if you send funds they can collect they know what we need and they get it in one shipment and get us. Those personal protective gears were shipped by air. Yes they were shipped by air because if it had gone by sea it would take three months. So actually donating and if you want you can be specific which country. Yes they've got a special fund for North Africa. If you were able to pick up this flyer the fund number is on the back. Hi my name is David Williams I'm originally from Sierra Leone also I live here in the metropolitan area I really feel just from listening to how this is going to be a multi approach. Multi in the sense not everybody who is dying having vomiting and diarrhea is dying from people. It's possible people are dying because they are not getting treatment for malaria. Yes. And typhoid. Yes. So maybe we really need to have a testing. That's what probably is going to be the most efficient way to separate the three diseases. The testing aspect once we are able to separate those people out of the world then we also need to be able to provide them to help the need for typhoid and malaria at least. Because those people are going to be susceptible to new diseases. So the multi approach just by listening to how it's nothing I've read or I have any insight I live here but the fact that someone is complaining of having Igola type symptoms which are not Igola. They are not going to be acknowledged. Yes. We are to reinforce what is said. We have had incidents when people have been ignored and they will go to hospital for even the person had appendicitis appendicitis and there were no doctors and that person died. So we are having deaths for other disease conditions. So one of the things I'm glad you mentioned is that we have been asking for is like testing kits testing kits for Igola testing kits for even malaria so that you can easily test this person. Now there have been some tests for HIV. We have those that we test people within 20 minutes half an hour. We can do your standards. So if that comes up we can get those kind of test kits in our hospitals or everywhere so that people can walk in and test. Because I think this Igola we are going to end up testing everybody to know their startups for us to be able to control it. Because people don't know. In fact Igola is even better but HIV you can go with it 3, 4, 5, 6 months. There are people who have never tested themselves but they are HIV positive. They are alive. So the sooner you can get yourself tested then you have the rest of men then you start doing things to prevent yourself really infecting yourself or infecting any other person. I think we are going to come to that to be able to really actually control. So that if we have test kits or means of testing in each of our hospitals and our health centers and have people trained because you walk in somebody will come to you dressed up properly and give you the education don't be afraid of me because I am wearing this I just want to help you let me just do your blow then within 20 minutes or 30 minutes they come back and say oh you are okay but then give you that post test education like we did for HIV. I think that will be a big plus. As we did such an effective job as the United Methodist Church campaign and we were on the forefront of that in the North Texas Conference and how we disseminated that information to our individual churches to help get this information out was so helpful and I see if we took and built upon what we have done with that and had like a poster that gave bullet points of what the problems are and then gave an effective way for a person in the congregation and just like a net cost $10 that saves lives some of the conservation gets that if you have a poster or something like we need prevention so what we need for prevention here is a bucket rather than filling it up with supplies imagine here is what it cost to have a provided bucket with chlorine for this village that cost X amount of dollars said we need to isolate the sick and say if we bought a testing kit this is what it would cost for a testing kit that's what I could do if you said I want to be people who are now starving that's a bullet point how can I help people not starve what does corn meal and protein powder cost to help a family that's isolated in their home survive now I've given my congregation tools and dollar points to see how they can get and so we're going to give this to you uncle yes we can work with uncle, uncle gave us this just for materials let me just emphasize yes if you're into church as a whole global you just don't know how much power we have over this government I really feel if not Texas for example we'll get the information to New York that we must pressure the government of Syria we have to insist on that trust me the IMC government is very powerful in Syria we have to take that forcefulness to action and say why don't we have a month designated as a testing month the whole month of this month you've got to do it Syria the government should have to do it we'll have the manpower we'll have to train the manpower and let's test everybody in December for example and we will start to eliminate and decrease the people who are not infected there will be a follow-up but the IMC church again I insist can't be involved in politics one way or another it's a political issue but the government is not going to budge but trust me when it comes to the United States the listen the listen our leaders have to take that mandate to the government of Syria we believe this will be one approach or whatever will come up with a strategy we've got an approach to the government director just don't leave it to bishops and the masses yes sir you said you might be getting from the testing kits as a primary yes testing kits I'm sorry I don't have that information but maybe you can get it from like who called the testing kits the test kits we have those preventive kits we have the test kits are I mean blood tests they have chemicals I really don't know and in us I know they are chemicals they use in the laboratories yes to test the blood but now I understand there are instant test kits like they are like what you use to test urine you know those kinds of things there are which you can put blood on like what you do for HIV you take a drop of blood and put it on a small chemical strip and something like that I haven't seen it myself since I've been here I've got that information and the Chinese have opened a huge treatment center and I understand they are testing people for less than an hour and they're getting results so I cannot even say that it's true or it's not because I'm in us I believe in seeing and observing myself to be able to confirm but it is happening yes so I'm sure if you went on the website when I came I was in India having meetings with for Kisi Hospital and one of the ladies was on the internet and she said I think they can have instant test kits for Ebola so I said where is it you know but we got distracted so those of you who are technology or who know technology and can solve I'm sure you'll be able to provide those information for us for the cost thing honestly I cannot say if the basic items like food like rice we know 50 kilograms of rice is 50 dollars equivalent now it used to be 20 but now it's 50 because it's 200,000 yes we know all the basic condiments everything has come up because of the scarcity you see so for now we cannot we cannot give you costs but there are conferences who would normally send containers of milk some rice North Carolina did that recently they worked with stop hunger project Indiana and they have sent a container from their home you see but sometimes it's a challenge to even clear those containers once they get to sell them this is why we are saying it's much easier for you here if you get the money send it through Unco they can get some of those materials they can release it to us when they release it to us then we can provide them look at it because it's a challenge you need to send containers I'm not that concerned about how this will vary or that there are because are we thinking about the future as you say we don't want another topic so I don't know how we can approach this if people can come together talk to the president do something about it burning the bodies but that's a real concern this is one issue that is being thought about as I speak the religious leaders are looking at that some of the Muslims would follow their member to where they are buried some people have had the opportunity to dictate to the burial team that our person would want this person to be laid here instead of being taken this is why it's important that the person or the family know and the family be allowed to participate and to have a say into what happens to the remains of their loved ones but that discussion is on because I strongly really would think it would be better for us to cremate than to continue burial can you imagine what we have we have buried nearly a thousand people and we look at the geographical in your story it's so small yes yes, many is not a question it's a contradiction based on what they have done which is that I have just been asked and thank you very much for the work for that wonderful information I must confess that I have paid a lot so I think there needs to be some bit of specifications because you say that as some which generally but and our friend tried to specify that one of the ways that we see is by finding the the instant testing kit but again, if I had it clearly the instant testing kit is not yet confirmed if it is there or not I'm not saying I'm confirming but what I'm saying is both it felt like it sounded to be an appealing way of one of the appealing way of attracting help and since it's not very clear if it is there or not what I'd like to suggest is can we please check if we can confirm what could try to claim that it is in existence and try to find out if it is there how helpful is it that's why I said I want to be sure if it is there those who want to challenge their fans to us that can do so maybe there are people who think that before I can donate I need to know what I'm donating what am I donating which challenge my fans take on is it the testing kit is it the medicine is it the medical help that will help yes you're very right thank you very much for that input you know I could not specifically say that's why I said some items some of those things can be got in country because if you look at now I mean this is a serious situation and the quicker we get things to us the better the results will be I have heard that there are instant tests and I have heard that the Chinese are using but we have to confirm there is somebody in my office who is deputizing me and they spoke to her this morning and they give me on daily basis the things that they need and they were saying sister we can do and they train us we are nurses who can be able to test other than depending on laboratories because the blood tests take at least two days but if there is an instant test like HIV you can just within 20 minutes the first thing then you move the first thing on you are quite right this is what even Umko is telling us that once we get the needs we make a list of what we cannot get in country and they can get from out here and send to us but it can be done in a bulk and these PPEs were sent to us by air you see not by boat because they are sent them by boats they will still be on the high seas by now but now every unit has those PPEs and the nurses are using you see so you are quite right my sister thank you for your contribution that's what you are my name is Florence Campbell I am the president of Sisters of Serium and these are members of Sisters of Serium we've been in and for 17 years since the war but I have a question the mission is aiding the list women and children victimized by the war for yesterday somebody was telling us that I am interfaith service that all the kids the orphans who lost their parents to this disease are just out all over there is nobody to take care of them how can we reach this what can we do and this is different from what you are discussing no it's not different it's all part of that discussion I am glad you brought it up because we deal with mothers pregnant women we deal with lactating mothers we deal with all the fries and I told you about the incident of the grandmother who took the two children to the general to do that you can go through the United Methodist Conference we have a women's coordinator we have a regional nationality who works with the women this is Elira Selu then we have Beatrice Fofana who is the women's coordinator and of course my office I am dealing with health generally which is either one of us we can be able to identify because one of the things that we need to do is to identify the locations of these children that have been often by Ebola we have a program called vulnerable children's program in Kisi Hospital where we have been supporting children who lost their parents to HIV you see this can be part of that program so that they can identify people who have lost parents to Ebola United Methodist is got a big following I am sure you know that we are in four districts in Sierra Leone we are in the north eastern province we are in the east and of course the western area so we have and most of our smaller units are in the rural setting we only have two hospitals in Frita like Rotifung Hospital the only hospital in the chiefdom of like 15 smaller communities sections Rotifung have heard about Rotifung Rotifung has been resubmitted it has been rehabilitated we have a medical doctor stationed at Rotifung and work is going on in Rotifung as I speak and they too have even developed a holding center so those hospitals are centers where people can register to say oh I lost so much this person and it can be easily verified the workers there are people who live in the communities so they will be able to verify those who have actually lost parents to Ebola so we have that kind of fascinating that we can do that so you can write a book through the women's desk or you go through the health desk or you go through the bishop he is very open he is very healthy I don't see I have never had to be careless how soon can they test the people here who have been exposed or can we just wait to see the kids there the people here in the US the young man the young man came he went to the hospital after 2 days he went back then he protested you can protest they've already tested the older people they've just said those people who are who are contact persons and they've got facilities for some plants just like that you've got nurses home twice a day to take temperature you see we don't have the staff to work in the hospital they just give the staff to test people you see those are some of the disparities we have we just we just create we can get like a third of those facilities out there maybe we would have got rid of the same I mean the the stuff that has gone on has been as a lay person as a non-medical person I mean just shocked that they left that family in that house for 2 weeks without doing anything I was concerned because I come from the Mola case and to think that in America somebody had been tested positive and the home 3-4 days that home was not visited it was not quarantined because once they take that patient the person out of the home and test the automatic candidate that was it that home is quarantined people of the Mola case but they are told you cannot go out people out is meant to be a risk but to say that we kept that woman on her own in that home for 3-4 days we don't know whether she got visitors because the people must have brought food for her she has friends yes yes really now I have the 2 things if you can narrow down time what are the 2 things that will allow the non-sexers to come from the state in helping you step on it if you go by the issue of testing if you make it a million now you do that testing kids you cannot test kids that are really skilled you cannot be followed by support to scale yes but even if you take it there and you don't train people to use it it's not so can you request their own call or is it because you are the main person you can talk to them and they can do it within a day or two to put it down the procedure that which can be thrown out to us yes I remain in a very good way we have centers not one, not two, not three where we can have testing centers so the path that can be done in a whole country we can't do as is suggested we have to wait a minute unless we do the test we cannot know who we are treating yes yes we said testing then we said we needed like vehicles, like ambulance also ambulances from those hospitals so that wherever it's a holding center that ambulance is there immediately to take the suspect so whether I'm with you then survivor kids I would say food because no matter how when the person is saved the person has to live so those are the three get a means of knowing who is infected get a means of not infecting so the nearest treatment center because we cannot all of us say we can do a treatment center the treatment center intends a whole lot of other things because when the staff specifically for that and we don't have that minister and we don't have the resources to do a treatment the government has provided treatment centers but we need to move mobility to move people from to the nearest treatment center and as we said testing is so those are the three get a means of knowing we've already gone over about 30 minutes and I know that you're very passionate about this topic and some of you would like to stay longer and ask more questions and you are free to do that but those of you that need to leave I don't want you to feel like you have to stay it's going so thank you very much for coming and please stay if you'd like to ask more questions congratulations