It much more, and this is, this is true on the human side and the veterinary side. When I was a practicing small animal veterinarian, I did orthopedic surgery, I did abdominal surgery, did minor ophthalmic procedures that almost no veterinarians in private practice would do today. Those are all, you know, we have orthopedic surgeons, we have dermatologists, they’re, they’re all manner of subspecialties. So it’s important to be competent in surgery, but in, in so many different areas, as the standard of care has risen that the standard of care for an orthopedic surgery or an abdominal surgery or dentistry have risen above the ability of one person to, to have all of that training. Because the, I’ve heard on the, on the human side, you know, if you’re going in for a major procedure yourself, you don’t want to go to an orthopedic surgeon that had, that doesn’t do 500 of these a year. Zoo veterinarians don’t do 500 of anything in a year. And so it, it’s not just acquiring the skillset, but your ability to, to stay current and, and also have the practice and the muscle memory so much more than when I was starting out in the, in the zoo field, we rely on a much more subdivided and rigorous cadre of experts, specialists in various fields of veterinary medicine or human medicine.