 Every time a woman has a delivery, she is risking her life for the sake of giving life. The mother that gave birth to you and gave birth to me, that's what a hero is. I'm Dr. Barry Kirby. I studied biomedical science at Griffith University and now I'm a rural GP in Papua New Guinea. My whole focus in life is trying to reduce maternal deaths. So at 52, I became a doctor. When I started this journey, I was too old, I came from the wrong background, carpenter, I'd failed high school. I had all these negative things thrown at me. So Griffith was the only university to give me a break and that's all I needed. Thor is the hands of rescue. So the hands of rescue focuses on reducing maternal deaths by increasing supervised deliveries and by upskilling staff to deal with obstetrics emergencies. So the whole idea is we're trying to make mother-friendly health centers. So we provide an incentive gift for mothers. We upskill the staff in dealing with these obstetrics emergencies and we also make the labor room more mother-friendly. Maternal deaths was not even on the radar when we started and we've put it on the radar saying that mothers are precious, they matter, they carry this country and we have to try and make it good for them. We're getting signs that the rest of the country may be following us. We've recently started in Simbu where we've had the professor of obstetrics in this country take up what we're doing. We've got the World Health Organization now looking at what we're doing and saying yes, incentivization of supervised delivery works. Helping women in this country have a better life is what I have to do. I mean, I'm just a normal bloke. I mean, every other guy's the same. You would feel the same way as I did if you had the same experiences I have. And the passion is still there. This is the whole thing. When you're focused on where you're supposed to be going in life, the energy that you have is just unlimited.