damian: and here's some video from jdrf. i mean, i guess peer support and counseling, like what you might provide, it all helps in, again, not curing it, but living with it. diana: living healthy with it. and absolutely, jdrf actually has partnered with a local agency in our community that's specifically geared towards supporting peers. so, they have a community program called dia-buddies, where teens that have diabetes are partnered with other teens for support. sometimes, the patients that i see don't know another person in the world that has type 1 diabetes. so, they're living with something that impacts them every day, all day. they feel isolated, alone. they feel like maybe they've done something wrong, especially because diabetes is so related to the food that we eat, so it's unlike many other diseases, where the patient, sometimes the kid, is the person that's delivering the care. think about that. i don't want to deliver my own care. and so, when a patient is asked to deliver their own care, there can be guilt associ