Well, I, I think so. So the concern is you want to, you want to make sure that the, the benefit that you are going to get from a particular procedure is worth the risk of anesthesia. And, and as I, as I mentioned before, the risk of anesthesia is something that, you know, we’ve worked to manage over decades in zoo animal medicine. And, and so the entire profession has been about mitigating or reducing risks associated with getting our hands on animals. But back, you know, a number of years ago, but during my time in the field, there were times when we were very, very risk averse thinking, you know, if I, if I put this animal under anesthesia, it, it very melt very well, might die. And, and then, you know, there there’s gonna be all this negative, negative reaction from the zoo or from our guests that were attached to that particular animal. And I think we largely, we largely overstated those risks sometime, particularly with you were, you were mentioning gorillas, there were times when, you know, it was pretty, they were pretty much off limits in terms of, in terms of doing anesthetic procedures because we were so worried that something bad might happen. And, and there were, there were cases, I know there was one that I saw in print decades ago where a gorilla was clearly bothered by something, it was annoying, its ear, it was scratching, you know, it progressed to having a head tilt and by the time they immobilized it, it had a rip roaring inner ear infection that the animal eventually succumbed to.