Dr. Clayton Alfonso: And then there have been a couple of times already that I have seen patients coming in to our family planning clinic thinking they were less than 12 weeks gestation. So they may have had irregular cycles. I think I had one patient who had first trimester bleeding that they thought was a menstrual cycle. When they called us said, “Oh yeah, I had bleeding four weeks ago,” and thought that they were only like 5 or 6 weeks pregnant and showed up and were 14 weeks pregnant. And so pre-last year, I would have been able to provide that patient with health care services right then and there. And I’ve had to refer those patients out of state. One of which couldn’t afford to travel out of state and continued the pregnancy despite not wanting to. And that’s just because someone in a [legislature] decided of an arbitrary cutoff that makes no sense in the health care world. But they just made this arbitrary 12 week cut off. And I think they fail to recognize how common irregular menstrual cycles are. I think in their mind, they are thinking that patients have 12 weeks to decide and three months is a lot of time to decide. So people have a lot of time. But in health care, we recognize that people have irregular menstrual cycles for a wide variety of reasons. PCOS, thyroid dysfunction, infertility issues. Right? People have so many reasons to think that they’re not pregnant and it’s just a normal part of their irregular cycles, and show up to care way further along than they think.