taylor park outside beaumont. clean hands, vital sign, history-taking, care. sometimes a anybody or neighbor's kid would be sick and susan would into -- see them, too. some of her patients did not want this. they did not want her comfort, the laying on of hands or a doctor who follows the egg cal imperative of patient nonabandonment. they wanted surgery, raidation, chemotherapy and cure. they wanted to live. [applause] >> has there been a time -- okay. one more story and this is about a time when -- undocumented lady was super sick and a volunteer managed to push and push and push and push until she got the care. the volunteer's name was jacqueline, and when i start in the story, we have already diagnosed her patient, gloria, with cervical cancer. working in galveston, we all too often encounter the stigma where we were able to diagnosis patients with cancers by getting biopsies and read by a surgeon but we were not able to get them treatment. so too unfrequently can't do chemotherapy, can't do surgery, couldn't do radiation, and when there's not a robust safety net, patients me a die of diseases you know are treatable.