many of our clients are in their 80's, some have chronic conditions and dementia and alzheimer's. precautions we've taken for 25 years, the vulnerable population, in their own homes where they're safe and secure. neil: it seems like common practice now, but you were ahead ahead of the curve on the virtual visits. a lot of people caught on to this. that started with you. how is that going now? do you feel when we're over the worst of this, that that's kind of the wave of the future? >> well, i don't think there's going to be any replacement for in-home human touch we provide, but there's an opportunity to mary the human touch with high-tech. it's a combination of high-tech and high touch. we can enhance the services that we provide, so we've seen an increase with our network on that adoption and rolling those technologies out. neil: do you think that when, you know, obviously there are senior centers, whether you're helping them out in such places or their own homes, that distancing measures, that preventive measures are probably the rule of thumb for a long, long time. do you thin