I, I, I, I heard, and this was, this was not in the context of veterinary medicine, but I’ve heard management trainers say, if, if I have 10 people that work for me and they all have all the same opinions as me, then I got 10 people that I don’t need working. For me. The the beauty of having, you know, putting more heads together is that everybody comes with a different set of experiences. And so the key to working together is trust. You know, you trust that, that they’re competent and they know how to, how to adequately manage a clinical case, but understand that they’re likely not going to do it exactly the way that you do. And the way we learn from that is we get the veterinarians together. You know, we’re not, we’re not consulting on every case, every step of the way, but on a regular basis, and in our case, weekly, the vets get together and kind of go over, you know, here’s what I’m, here’s how I’m managing this case. And there’s usually a primary veterinarian for any given animal. And, and so the other vets know the approach, but you’re able to share the clinical knowledge and the clinical experience of how veterinarian A, B, C or D is managing a, a particular animal.