OK. Well I'm very happy to welcome Caitlin Gerdts to our course today. Caitlin is going to be speaking about reproductive health issues. And this is a huge topic. It covers many, many issues, maybe we'll touch on a good number of them. And Caitlin is going to tell us a little bit about herself, and then we'll move into this large area of discussion. Thanks Caitlin for coming. Thank you, Anne. It's lovely to be here. Well can you give us a sort of general overview of the huge field? Of reproductive health? It is indeed a broad one. And you know, I think that it's an interesting name to start. I think that talking about reproductive health, we certainly think about things that come with human reproduction. And that means everything from the pregnancy to childbirth, but it also includes the fields of contraception and family planning. And I think that often the word reproductive health or the term reproductive health has in today's day and age become a bit of a euphemism for abortion in some circles where the word abortion is not said as often or as comfortably. But I do think that taking a holistic view of the term reproductive health, we have to think about a whole range of things that include young women's health to menopause, even. And I think that there are many, many facets to it. And there are many different disciplines that intersect in this broad field. You have clinicians. You have social scientists. You have advocates. You have nonprofit workers, program planners on the ground working in the field of reproductive health. And I think there's some interesting intersections as well with sexually transmitted infections, with HIV. I think there's quite a broad view that you can take on reproductive health. My specific focus has always been family planning and abortion which is just a small sliver of reproductive health.