I’m doctor Michael Williams, one of the general surgeons here. I do acute care surgery which means a combination of emergency general surgery, trauma surgery and critical care of the ICU patient on the surgical side of things. When I finished my training as a general surgeon in New Orleans at Louisiana State University, I knew that I wanted to take care of my patient wherever they were in the hospital and that included in the ICU, and right about then, the idea of intensive care fellowship was really gaining steam, so I applied for it, and ended up getting a fellowship in surgical, critical care, and right about that time, that become synonymous with trauma. I think the elective patient that comes to see us, what I think fundamentally they can expect, compassion in that we will meet them where they are with our practice and they'll see a nurses aid, they'll see an RN, they'll see an NP, they'll see an MD, they'll see medical students they'll see residents, team based care. One of the reasons I say I’ve remained as broad in my practice and not gone down a very narrow specialty branch is that I want to be available to help a wide variety of people across a variety of circumstances and finding ways, particularly cost effective ways to help populations of patients with my technical and clinical skills. It’s one of those things that keeps me getting out of bed at night, on weekends and holidays.