 So, Escape Fire is an incredibly important documentary to come out right now because most of our debate around healthcare has been around the problem of access, around how do we cover the 40 million uninsured. So the debates have been surrounding that. The debate has also been around the Affordable Care Act, which is mostly about covering the 40 million uninsured. And what this film really does beautifully is it highlights the other side of the problem, which is how poor the delivery system is, how bad so much of the care is, how uncoordinated it is, and how much of it is really unnecessary. There was this one scene in the documentary that really struck me, and it's a very simple little moment. It was a soldier who is learning to deal with his post-traumatic stress disorder. And he was doing meditation. This is one of the things that the military is experimenting with. And he was meditating, and you could see by the expression on his face that he was reliving something terrible. And the woman who was running the program just came over and touched him and calmed him. And it's this very powerful moment, and it reminds us that a big part of healing is not technology, it's the human connection. Now this human connection was not a huge theme of the documentary, but it does kind of run throughout. And one of the other areas that it touches on is the crucial importance of primary care. Your primary care doctor is the doctor who looks at you as a whole person. Your primary care doctor is really crucially important. And I think a lot of Americans would be surprised by learning that. Really good primary care can keep you out of the hospital. Really good primary care can keep you from having to go to the emergency room unnecessarily. And really good primary care can make sure that your chronic illness, like if it's asthma or heart disease or kidney disease or whatever it is, your primary care doctor is really important to making sure that you get what you need and that you take care of yourself. I think probably the most important phrase in the documentary came from a physician named Steve Nissen, who's at the Cleveland Clinic. And he said, medicine loses its way when it becomes a business.