Consistency and adjudication. Part of that is training. Had approximately 20 training sessions delivered by cms, their doctors, their policy experts. To the Administrative Law judges since 2010. What you will see if you look at the Historical Data is the reversal rates have actually been going down. Were at a high in 2010, 50 5. 5 fully favorable and that is now down to 35. 2 . To 35. 2 . Do you think there is a better quality of decision . The case is coming up to you. They either make better decisions at a lower level where there is something that has happened at the alj with better training and youre making better decisions earlier in finding people fully favorable more often than what would be consistent with policy. Or joint training leading to better consistency among different adjudication levels. Say in herns if you training has fixed that, it was an issue at some point that we were doing too many fully favorable and partially favorable. I dont think i would go so far as to say