Dr. Katherine Farris: We already know that nationally, women of color I think are 2.6 times more likely to die in childbirth than white women. And in the South, in South Carolina, I believe the statistic is four times as likely if you are a Black person than a white person. I think we’ll see that expanded. I think we’ll see the same thing with poor people. Again, this took some time after Dobbs, and we’re just getting preliminary data on– and this isn’t something that I’m involved in in my work, because I don’t work at a training program. We train residents but we’re not a residency. But we are seeing decreased applications in obstetrics as a whole, and absolutely in obstetrics in Southern states. But I think we’re also seeing, starting to see decreased applications for all specialties in Southern states, because people don’t want to live there. Particularly women don’t want to live in a state where they won’t have access to health care. So I think we’re going to see with that, hospital closures, fewer labor and delivery wards, and that is going to magnify people dying from desired pregnancies, or having more complications related to desired pregnancies because of the lack of access to caregivers to provide this care. And then I think it’s going to spread out to other types of care as well. I think it’s going to be a very slow process, but I absolutely think that.