grant cofax. >> thank you all, today. it's great to be back in ward 86. i worked here for over a decade and i'm looking forward to returning to the clinic to be a clinician as well. i experienced, as with many of you, the grief and the sadness and advances that we've made with h.i.v. i started as a medical student and we've seen the progression that we've made and the progress that's been accomplished. whether you're a community provider, a clinician, a researcher, a member of the press, i think the legacy teaches us that it takes a collective vision, a collective effort. priority-setting, and understanding what are the priorities in the system to help us do better. that's the san francisco h.i.v. model. that's our home-grown model that got us here today with h.i.v. it will get us to zero. getting to zero has the department's full support going forward. i think as importantly is the san francisco model for what we do with h.i.v. will also be the model for how we address what may seem like intractable health problems today. think about where we were 20, 25