I, I think one of the things, one of the areas where we’ve really advanced and where I think we need to continue to advance is in the area of diagnostics. We’ve always, we in zoo medicine have always had a challenge compared to our colleagues work with domestic animals. If you’re working on a dog or a cat or even a horse or a cow, you can walk up to the animal, listen to its heart, do a physical exam, draw a blood sample, give injections, and for many of our animals, either for our safety or the animal’s safety, we need to immobilize or anesthetize those animals just to get a hand on them. So all the tests that you would need to undergo before you went under general anesthesia, we have to put the animals under general anesthesia in order to get those tests in the first place in order to listen to their heart and find out what things are going on. And so I think the, the, the challenges are the same as they’ve always been, how to safely get access to animals and also advancing tests, molecular diagnostics, the things that have been developed during my time as a veterinarian allow you to learn so much more about an animal’s conditions or some of the underlying concerns that groups of animals may have, that I think those are in the area of diagnostics is an area that we need to continue advancing.