- I'm Jenny Harvey. I'm the director of breast imaging here at the University of Virginia. I am a radiologist, which means I read all types of breast imaging studies-- mammograms, breast ultrasounds, breast MRIs. But my job is also very clinical, so I actually see and talk to patients I do breast exams to correlate that with the imaging findings. I mean I love interacting with people and caring for them, trying to make their life better. I think that's what really attracted me to medicine. So most of radiology is like you get a worklist, and you're reading images all day. And that would make me crazy. I want to see people, talk to them, but especially in breast care because I want to know what you're feeling, how worried are you about it. And I also want to know sort of what's going on with that so that I can help them make better decisions for your care. So we do screening mammograms all over the community really to make it easy for you to get a mammogram. And-- but if you have a problem, if there's abnormal finding potentially on your mammogram or if you feel something in your breast, something you're not sure about, then we would see you at our diagnostic center. And there we're probably going to do some images because that's what we do-- a mammogram, ultrasound, something like that. But often we will typically come and talk to you as well, find out what's going on. If you're feeling something, we want you to show it to us so we can help you figure out what's going on there. So that's kind of in a nutshell what to expect.