On the personalized medicine question, I think it is absolutely critical. I can comment specifically on Parkinson's, and I think it's true of MS and other conditions, that everybody manifests symptoms and reacts to treatment in a different way.
I think the reason our clinic works so well is that we address every person as an individual and target needs according to individual priorities, not my priorities. I think this is really optimizing. There are no cures, but there are some treatments, and we are maximizing what we can do with the treatments that are currently available. It doesn't cost extra money; it's just using what we already know. Even though that sounds intuitive, you'd be amazed how rare it actually is.
Treatments of chronic neurological diseases can't be perceived like infectious diseases: you get an antibiotic, you take it for ten days, and then it's over and done. It's an ongoing entity and it affects every aspect of a person's life. In order to do what we can for people and use the resources that we have, we have to address what their needs really are.
Now, in relation to other clinics in the country—