so she used her savings and i went with her to harley street to see a specialist, and he said if he'd come six months early, he could have operated and removed , removed the cancerous removed, removed the cancerous part of her liver. but he said it was now too late , and that it was now too late, and that all he could do was offer her a drug that would make her very poorly , may prolong her life by poorly, may prolong her life by a couple of months, but would put her in bed and we talked her out of it and said, look, you know, you've maintained your dignity and independence. let's do this to the very end. and we made sure that she was at home where she wanted to be with her family. but i, you know, she could be seeing her grandchildren now. and what they're up to if, if, you know, this hadn't happened to her as it has happened to, as we know already, 3000 people, but it will be much bigger than this, you know, it's much more it's much likely to be closer to 6000 people, because if you look at the number of people that have been infected and how hepatitis c works, it's quite a slow kil