
254: The Psychology of Addiction with Steve Daviss, MD
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This weekās guest is Dr. Steve Daviss, a consultation laison psychiatrist. He joins Brett to talk about pandemic psychology, addiction, ADHD, note taking, and a bit of making music with code.
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Transcript
254 Steve Daviss
[00:00:00]Brett: [00:00:00] [00:00:00] This weekās guest is Dr. Steve Davis. Heās a consultation liaison psychiatrist. Hi Steve.
[00:00:07] Steve: [00:00:07] Hey, Brett. Uh, thank you for a vitamin onto your show.
[00:00:11] Brett: [00:00:11] Oh, absolutely. Uh, tell me what a, uh, consultation liaison psychiatrist does.
[00:00:18] Steve: [00:00:18] Uh, thatās a great question. Um, so. Uh, consultation, liaison psychiatrist. Uh, the words in that phrase, essentially refer to psychiatrists who work in typically medical settings. Um, often hospitals emergency room. Sometimes it might be nursing homes, um, and. Uh, the focus is really, Iāve got somebody here with some sort of problem, and I need a psychiatrist to, uh, evaluate and see if they have a psychiatric problem that might be contributing or, uh, the person has [00:01:00] psychiatric symptoms.
[00:01:01] We think it might be XYZ, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, uh, alcohol withdrawal. Um, but we know we want a second opinion. So thatās, thatās really what we do. We work in hospital settings generally. Um, and thatās where I spent most of my career, I guess, working in either hospital settings or other kind of primary care setting.
[00:01:24] Itās like a FQHC federally qualified health center or primary care offices. Um, so that in essence is what a cl psychiatrist, uh, does. Uh, Iām also, uh, an addiction psychiatrist, um, frankly, Itās hard to do psychiatry without also doing addiction. Uh, and Iāve done a lot of, um, uh, work around addiction. In fact, Iām currently the president of the Maryland DC society of addiction medicine, which is a chapter of the larger national main addiction [00:02:00] organization, which is a, or the American society of addiction medicine.
[00:02:03] Brett: [00:02:03] So you do a lot more, um, uh, consultation than actual long-term seeing of patients, at least in your capacity as a consultation liaison, then.
[00:02:14] Steve: [00:02:14] Um, I had been, um, my career has kind of, um, O taken a winding path. I, you know, I started off doing, uh, actually frankly, schizophrenia research way back in the day. Um, and. Uh, I wanted to go into, uh, research, uh, primarily because it thatās what attracted me to psychiatry and medicine in the first place. I, um, uh, growing up, I had a, um, uh, family members who developed schizophrenia at a young age in their teens, uh, which is oftentimes when it develops and the.
[00:02:54] Uh, just to see, you know, these loved ones of mine transform [00:03:00] with hallucinations and seeing numbers floating in the air. And it just kinda made me made, you know, I was younger than them. I was probably 11 or 12 and made me wonder how does the brain do this weird stuff? Um, and I was kind of a geeky kid to begin with.
[00:03:15] Uh, so that just was something to focus on and, um, I never let go of it. I mean, thatās really, whatās driven my. My, my career is how does, how does it happen that the brain gets broken like that and how to fix it?
[00:03:32] Brett: [00:03:32] do you think itās a typical fo it surprises me that youāre still fascinated now by what you were fascinated by when you were 12.
[00:03:43] Steve: [00:03:43] yeah, well it reminds me of, um, you know, so I, so I went into. Uh, kind of a research research career. I actually started out as an MD PhD candidate. Um, and then, uh, [00:04:00] Uh, when I was driving around to, um, residencies, you know, you go to four years of medical school after college, four years of medical school, then internship and residency for psychiatry, which is, uh, uh, typically four years.
[00:04:15] Um, and then maybe a fellowship or, or start your career. And as I was driving up to Dartmouth, um, and New Hampshire, um, for my interview on the radio, Um, there was an NPR, a story about how they found the gene for schizophrenia. And, um, I remember kind of shouting, you know, and exclamation as Iām driving. Um, Oh, this is great.
[00:04:42] And then my next thought was, Oh, well, I guess they solve that problem. Maybe I wonāt go into research. Um, as we know, itās never as simple as it seems. Uh, there are, you know, a bazillion genes that seem to. I have something to do with, uh, schizophrenia and, um, [00:05:00] it remains, uh, mental health in general, um, remains, uh, to me a very interesting, challenging area.
[00:05:09] Um, although over the years, my interest have gone from research, you know, causes it, how to treat it, um, to more mundane, but probably much more important things like, uh, we know what good care looks like. We sometimes donāt know how to get it to people. You donāt know how to get it to them, where to get it to them, how to make it affordable, how to make it effective.
[00:05:36] So a big part of, um, psychiatry nowadays is often, uh, uh, implementation research, how to. Get people, the care that they need, itās a little sad, um, that it is like that. Cause we donāt seem to have as much trouble getting diabetes treatment to people and blood pressure treatment to people. Uh, but it continues to be a problem.
[00:05:57] Brett: [00:05:57] Do you, I think that, uh, I mean, thereās been a lot of [00:06:00] talk over the last couple of years about mental health, especially mental health in America. Do you feel like things are changing, uh, that there actually is more of a light being shined on those problems?
[00:06:12] Steve: [00:06:12] I do. Um, you know, itās been something thatās been changing, I think over the years, but, um, over the past, I would say five, eight years or so there seems to be an increasing. Recognition of the centrality of mental health and by, and when I say mental health, I mean like mental health and addiction, I, I, a lot of people split those two things separately.
[00:06:39] I think of them, many of us think of them as, as together, itās all brain stuff. Um, and so, uh, the, uh, th the recognition that if you donāt. Address those issues, then somebodyās health, physical health suffers as well. And so youāve got to [00:07:00] do both and if you donāt do both, youāre not going to do a good job.
[00:07:04] If youāre just focused on physical health, like diabetes, you wonāt do a great job with that, unless youāve got the mental health stuff under your control.
[00:07:12] Brett: [00:07:12] So you talked about, uh, genes for schizophrenia and I, over my life, heard a lot about, you know, the various mental illnesses being passed on genetically has, has that kind of research resulted in any, um, actual therapies? Um, it does knowing that itās genetic help in treatment.
[00:07:36] Steve: [00:07:36] um, it, itās not a direct answer to that. Um, overall, you know, a blunt answer would be, um, not greatly, uh, but, uh, thereās more nuanced answers. So. Um, knowing that the target of the gene. So what does that gene do, you know, does it code for, uh, a certain neurotransmitter receptor [00:08:00] or, um, some other piece of the receptor, uh, ecosystem?
[00:08:06] Um, if you will. Uh, so there are different things in the, in, in the neuron, in the brain cells, um, that either make neurotransmitters and neuro-transmitters are generally the, you know, the messenger. Um, uh, the lingua franca, if Frank gua rank God, if you will. Um, and, uh, so knowing about what is broken, you know, if a gene has an error in its code, um, that helps you understand, well, maybe we should design a drug or find a drug.
[00:08:41] That targets, that particular receptor and tries to work around the defect. So it does, it does help to define the targets, the, uh, the drugs that, uh, drug companies, um, uh, think about and look for. When theyāre trying to figure out, okay, what, what else will work? [00:09:00] Um, so that, that does drive. Um, those, those types of genetics do drive some of the research, but thereās still, I think a lot more that we donāt know then there is that we do know.
[00:09:13] Brett: [00:09:13] So whatās, uh, whatās new and exciting and the field of addiction and psychiatry.
[00:09:21] Steve: [00:09:21] Um, so those, those things. Um, certainly as I said, go together. Um, and, uh, whatās new is, is whatās really old, unfortunately. So, um, we talk about whole person care. Um, you know, uh, whether it be physical, uh, mental, uh, addiction, uh, but there continues to be a lot of separation. Between those three things. And even between addiction and psychiatry.
[00:09:53] So some of the new stuff is, uh, finding models of care that knit [00:10:00] these things together in a way that where you can get treatment for both types of conditions, uh, mental health condition, and, uh, addiction condition, and ideally even your physical health, all in one place. Thatās the big, um, The, the big thing right now is putting all that together.
[00:10:19] Um, so that there are not these silos or, or wrong doors. It used to be instilled as sometimes where you might go to, uh, your doctor or to mental health clinic and say, Oh, Iāve got this problem with, uh, opioid use. You know, I, I wanna, I wanna, I wanna have that taken care of, um, And be told, Oh, well, we donāt do that here.
[00:10:43] You got to go somewhere else. Uh, which is pretty frustrating. Um, same with, if you go to your primary care doctor and you want help for depression. And she says, um, Oh, I donāt treat depression. You have to go to somebody else. Um, so trying to, [00:11:00] uh, put these things together so that you can get your treatment for all your conditions from one place.
[00:11:07] And they can bring in specialists when needed. Um, uh, thatās uh, unfortunately thatās kind of a new thing. Um, relatively new, but people are starting to pay for it. Thatās the key is, um, insurance companies, Medicare. It wasnāt too long ago that Medicare, um, did not cover, uh, treatment for mental illness more than.
[00:11:31] You know, a small amount, 20 visits a year or something like that. Uh, and then they didnāt put limits on other, you know, conditions, uh, that, that has gotten better. So, uh, so these are, these are new things. Um, you know, thereās always some new medications. Uh, there are some sexy things I would call that sexy, I guess.
[00:11:51] Um, new interventions, like TMS transcranial magnetic stimulation. Itās been around a while, but itās still, itās newer compared [00:12:00] to other treatments, but itās a non-medication. Form of treating various conditions. Itās approved for treating, uh, treatment resistant depression. So depression that doesnāt respond to medications after, you know, a decent trial, uh, and, um, TMS involves essentially a big electromagnet that gets essentially held over your, your, your head, your scalp, and a certain type of physician, um, positioned in a way that, uh, theyāre deep narrow beams of magnetic.
[00:12:33] Energy, uh, that in a focus way, try to go to parts of the brain that are involved in depression. Um, and, um, uh, I donāt know, uh, zap them, if you will. Itās youāre not killing anything. Itās just, youāre sending a magnetic pulse that causes a current flow, um, uh, an electrochemical current flow. And we donāt know exactly why that.
[00:13:00] [00:13:00] Helps. I mean, Iām sure thereās lots of theories and so forth, but, um, itās a bit of a, Oh, you know, um, there, thereās a far side cartoon with a wooly mammoth laying dead on its back. And thereās a single arrow, like in his stomach somewhere. And I think the caveman says something like letās write down where that spot is.
[00:13:21] Brett: [00:13:21] um,
[00:13:21] Steve: [00:13:21] of like that,
[00:13:22] Brett: [00:13:22] thereās so.
[00:13:23] Steve: [00:13:23] yeah, go ahead.
[00:13:24] Brett: [00:13:24] Thereās like a whole pseudo science around magnets, which I feel like, uh, having actual clinical uses for magnets is only going to lend strength to this craziness with all these magnetic, uh, like necklaces youāre supposed to be able to buy and theyāll fix your life.
[00:13:42] Steve: [00:13:42] Oh, yeah. Um, yeah, so there thereās some good research to show that these strong, um, uh, electromagnets. Um, do something, but these are strong. Like if you, if you turn on the magnet [00:14:00] and youāve got, uh, something metallic, uh, um, uh, near you, it can, it can hurt you. I mean, it can fling across the room. This is, uh, a serious, um, uh, uh, type of, uh, uh, electromagnet, um, that costs you can buy these machines, these transcranial magnetic stimulation machines they cost about, I guess, a hundred thousand dollars.
[00:14:24] Um, and itās not something that, um, youād buy and keep it in your house next to your treadmill. Right. Uh, but, um, uh, there are certainly plenty of psychiatrists that are using it and itās pretty effective. It does require though. Um, daily treatment about five days, five days a week. Um, you know, for most forms of it, thereās a couple of different forms forms of magnets now, but the most common one youāre getting this treatment for about 35, 40 minutes, five times a week for about six weeks.
[00:14:57] That seems to be the dosage that, [00:15:00] um, makes a difference. But I have definitely seen people who have not responded to your usual types of treatment. Um, who do respond to this? Itās not a magic bullet. Uh, itās about a 30, 40% or so response rate. But if youāre in that 30 or 40%, youāre going to be pretty happy that it works.
[00:15:21] If it does.
[00:15:23] Brett: [00:15:23] So Iāll, I want to offer some background before I ask this. Um, like I, in, uh, in my late teens, early twenties was addicted to all kinds of things. Um, like to the point of homelessness. And, uh, when I got, uh, diagnosed for bipolar in my twenties, Uh, that wasnāt the turning point, but at the same time, like as part of getting my life together, I started going to N a and I found that, um, mentioning my addictions to my [00:16:00] primary care physician led to, uh, bad things happening to my care, uh, mentioning or trying to treat, uh, addiction via my psychiatrist was just, she would just refer me to.
[00:16:15] He at the time would just refer me to a, like, they didnāt want it. They didnāt have any solutions for me. It all had to go through 12 step programs. So what Iām really curious about is this is 15, 20 years ago. Uh, w what would there be help for me now, if I were in a position, uh, that I, if I were actively abusing drugs or was recently clean, Would psychiatry have new answers for me?
[00:16:49] Steve: [00:16:49] they would have better answers. Um, some of the, some of them are new. Some of the answers are new, uh, 12 step programs, you know, uh, those, those [00:17:00] started back in the 1930s, um, by, you know, a couple of guys, uh, Iām sure, you know, the story, um, and really focused on, on alcoholism. Um, and. Um, that sort of, uh, social support.
[00:17:15] Um, and there are a number of factors. I think that, that make that helpful, but, um, there are treatments that are more effective even than say 12 step. Um, so for example, as we learn more about the biology of addiction, which is actually pretty well mapped out, um, What you learn is that there are types of treatments, either.
[00:17:40] Some of which are medications, some of which are more, some people will call them psychosocial treatments, um, like, uh, motivational enhancement therapy. Um, there are, um, The, the, the [00:18:00] medications for it though, I think are pretty helpful. You know, this is the United States. Everybody wants to take a pill to fix a problem.
[00:18:07] Um, and, um, we look for those things, but for some types of addiction, we, you know, there are medications that have been shown to be effective. More effective than placebo, at least. Um, and, um, an example of that would be for, for alcohol, the main medicine for many years was, um, deisel for, or an abuse. And, you know, thatās a medication that mucks up your liverās ability to break down alcohol and kind of blocks the pathway so that a certain chemical builds up and makes you really sick.
[00:18:47] I mean, it makes you feel lousy, vomit and so forth. Um, and, uh, that was more of an adversive type of
[00:18:56] Brett: [00:18:56] Positive punishment.
[00:18:57] Steve: [00:18:57] treatment. Yes. Yeah. Um, [00:19:00] you know, Iāve, Iāve used that some, um, itās not the most popular as you can, as you might imagine, but Iāve had people tell me that, um, without that they wouldnāt have been able to stop.
[00:19:10] Um, but even that is kind of, I would say fallen. More out of favor, um, for, uh, you know, other substances like other medications. Uh, now Trek zone is a good one. Um, now Trek zone, um, also goes by the name of Revia or Vivitrol. Um, it is a opioid antagonist, so it blocks the opioid receptor. Um, and in, so doing, um, if you were to take.
[00:19:41] You know, like oxycodone or heroin, um, it wouldnāt have much of an effect because youāre blocking that receptor and, and the opioid that you took would not be able to bind and do its thing. Um, so. Taking a medication that blocks that, [00:20:00] um, also helps with alcoholism because when you drink your body releases, you know, your own internal, um, opioids, the endorphins that youāve probably heard of, um, and those endorphins make you feel good about drinking at least early on.
[00:20:18] Um, and so by blocking those receptors, then when you drink. You donāt get quite the same, feel good out of it. You donāt get the same buzz out of it. And because you remove that kind of reward, then, um, you develop a habit of, ah, you know, I donāt care so much about the drinking. Thatās the thinking behind it.
[00:20:41] And it seems to work, but it doesnāt work for, for everyone.
[00:20:44] Brett: [00:20:44] so like the, the thing that got me. Was, I could get off of any given drug and I could go completely clean and sober, but my addictive behavior would show up in completely non related areas of my life, [00:21:00] like, uh, obsessions and, um, unhealthy behaviors, uh, that had nothing to do with, you know, sticking needles in my arm anymore, or, or even like drinking, like completely non drug related.
[00:21:11] Uh, and it seems like all of those treatments that you just mentioned were very much about the physical. About turning off like pleasure centers. Is there, is there anything new in the area of actually treating the, uh, not the chemical dependency, but the addiction.
[00:21:32] Steve: [00:21:32] Um, yeah, so, you know, addiction is sort of a S a cycle. And in fact, if you look at the. The, the, um, reward systems in the brain. Youāll see, it actually looks like a circuit, um, you know, uh, kind of a three-way circuit, if you will. And so the trick to treating and stopping addictions is to block that circuit because itās this pathological feedback loop.
[00:21:59] Um, that [00:22:00] just kind of spins and spins and spins, and youāve got to do things to block it. So some of the things that people do would be to, uh, use a medication to block that cycle, but there are non-medication. Ways to block those cycles. So, um, learning, um, essentially how to, uh, change your behaviors, you know, uh, you can learn as Iām sure you already have.
[00:22:27] Youāve probably learned that there are certain things that if you, if you do those things, they might be more likely to facilitate, uh, escalation of an addiction.
[00:22:40] Brett: [00:22:40] yeah.
[00:22:41] Steve: [00:22:41] Um, you know, and for some people thatās, uh, uh, go into a bar and hanging out with their friends. Oh no, I wonāt drink. I wonāt drink. Iām just going to see here, sit here in the bar and be with my friends.
[00:22:53] Well, you know, um, our brain associates senses things, um, seeing, [00:23:00] seeing the, uh, people drinking, uh, hearing the clinking of glasses. Um, back in the day when people smoked in bars, you know, cigarettes smoke all these sorts of cues and these cues, um, train your brain to go, ah, I want the thing, the feel-good thing thatās associated with those cues.
[00:23:19] So just learning how to block that cycle by avoiding those cues and, um, you know, a big part of the problem sometimes is. Just teaching people how to identify those cues in the first place. Uh, you, you probably hear of, uh, you know, in 12 step, they talk about people, places and things. These are all, um, you know, things that you associate with with using or with feeling good while youāre using substances.
[00:23:48] Um, and those things require changing, um, to, uh, break, break that cycle. So it is a combination of. You know, uh, the, the best treatments probably [00:24:00] try to hit that cycle pattern in multiple different ways, you know, uh, like, uh, uh, letās say for opioid use disorder, um, buprenorphine, Suboxone, that is a medication that, uh, is an opioid itself.
[00:24:19] Um, but it is, uh, it seems to be associated with less. Um, uh, less of a reward feeling from it. Um, it has a bit of a ceiling effect, so you canāt like take more and more and, um, feel better and better. Oh, that reminds me that, um, the other thing that the brain is really good about, uh, although sometimes that good can be bad is, um, if it starts to see.
[00:24:47] Um, experience, uh, a, letās say, um, you know, some sort of opioid on an ongoing basis while your, your brain already makes its own endorphins. [00:25:00] Um, but if you are supplementing that on a regular daily basis, then your brain starts to go out. I donāt need to make those endorphins anymore because Iām just getting too much as it is.
[00:25:11] So Iām going to stop that. Well, if you were to then stop. Using your opioid. It takes a little bit of time for your brain to kick in and go up. I see. Iām not getting any of that anymore. I better start making more of those endorphins. Um, and then youāre going to have a deficit of those endorphins. And when that happens, that can be an uncomfortable feeling.
[00:25:32] Uh, the other thing that your brain will do is, uh, because the, the endorphins or the heroin or the opioid that you take, um, Uh, does its thing by binding to receptors. The other thing that the brain is really good at is going, Hmm, Iām getting too much of these opioids. Iām going to make less receptors. So that way Iām not getting stimulated so much.
[00:25:57] Uh itās too much hyperstimulation. So Iām going to [00:26:00] tone down those receptors and make fewer of them. Well, thatās fine. As long as your dosage of opioids always stays the same, um, Uh, but what will happen is if youāre making fewer receptors and then you take away the opioids, it takes about two weeks to make new receptors.
[00:26:20] So that means for two weeks, youāre going to have, youāre going to your, brainās going to be starving for what itās used to getting. And thatās what go through withdrawal and, you know, shakes and tremors. And, um, itās a very extreme vomiting, a very uncomfortable feeling. Which is why if youāve experienced, youāll know that, um, people will do just about anything to avoid feeling that bad.
[00:26:46] And thatās that cycle of addiction that gets you, you know, the brain, the opiod is really hijacking your brain and its own regulatory processes. Uh, and doing it in a way that youāve lost control. Once you get to that [00:27:00] point, itās really hard to, to regain control. Some people are able to do that. Um, without a lot of intervention, I think those people are.
[00:27:09] Far and few between, um, others need more help. Um, and still others just never quite get to the point where they get the help. And Iāve seen people who are, you know, using opioids off the street for, you know, 30, 40 years or so. A big problem nowadays of course, is that we have a toxic drug supply. Um, With the fentanyl thatās out there.
[00:27:31] Itās, you know, itās, fentanylās super strong. It is easy to a small amount. Itās easy to get in to the country from different places. Um, and, uh, if youāre in the business of, uh, of being a street dealer and selling, um, opioids, usually itās heroin. Most of the heroin thatās sold on the street now has no heroin in it.
[00:27:54] Itās fentanyl. And then a bunch of like sugar and other white stuff.
[00:27:59] Brett: [00:27:59] Yeah, Iām [00:28:00] glad I got out when I did, I guess. But, uh, so you, you, I donāt mean to stick on this topic forever, but you T you talked about opioid disorder. Um, and the way that it was always presented to me, mostly through 12 steps is that there arenāt different kinds of addiction. Itās all just addiction. Are there different?
[00:28:21] Are there different kind of, uh, brain patterns between different types of drug users?
[00:28:28] Steve: [00:28:28] um, more, I, Iām not a, an expert on, on the, the fine points of, you know, the, the brainās reward system with respect to different types of addictions. But I, I do know that, um, Those addictions are much, much more alike than they are different. There may be some differences, like for example, cocaine addiction, um, is much more focused on the dopamine reward system as opposed to the, [00:29:00] um, endorphin the opioid receptor system.
[00:29:03] Um, so there might be some subtle differences, but much more alike than they are different. Absolutely. And that goes with other types of addiction too. People are, have sexual addictions. Um, some people gambling, um, thereās a lot of, a lot more similarity there than there are differences.
[00:29:20] Brett: [00:29:20] I cured my cocaine addiction by starting to use heroin. Um, I feel like Iām, well-versed
[00:29:27] Steve: [00:29:27] Well, and, and so that is very old school because back in the late 18 hundreds, early 19 hundreds, thatās exactly what people did. You came in with cocaine addiction. We will treat it with heroin. You come in with heroin addiction, we might treat it with cocaine, um, or cannabis, or, you know, um, you know, if you go back far enough, they were using all sorts of things.
[00:29:52] Um, Uh, lead for example, or I think maybe I want to say arsenic was [00:30:00] also used sometimes. So, uh, of course that those were the, there were days when, I guess it was, uh, leeches and all sorts of weird things.
[00:30:09] Brett: [00:30:09] humors. Yeah. Um, so how has, uh, Iām gonna, Iām gonna try to get off my, uh, my obsession with the addiction thing. How has, uh, how has COVID affected your, your life, your daily job?
[00:30:25] Steve: [00:30:25] Uh, for, for me, um, uh, personally, I mean, it certainly itās disrupted the whole country, the whole planet, um, and in various different ways, um, you know, the work that I do. Uh, right now, Iām not doing direct care. Um, I, uh, I guess in December of 2019, I started working for, um, an insurance company. Optum. Iāve never worked for a payer before.
[00:30:53] Um, but they had a contract to do, uh, take care of, uh, people with behavioral health problems, um, in [00:31:00] Maryland who are, uh, who have Medicaid and, um, I, you know, Iām the sort of person that I like to know how things work underneath the infrastructure, the gears that make everything turn, which is probably what attracted me to psychiatry and to, uh, research initially.
[00:31:18] Um, but thatās true with all sorts of systems. I like to know what makes everything, um, uh, tick and weāve got a lot of problems in our healthcare. Um, if you havenāt noticed, and some of those problems, you know, aside from COVID. Um, just again, the whole, um, how to implement a treatment to people and get those, those services, um, you know, available to them.
[00:31:48] Um, that whole system just isnāt working well here. So I decided, well, let me, you know, the job opportunity came up to, um, to work on the payer side. And I think a big part [00:32:00] of it is how. Healthcare is financed and paid for and the incentives theyāre in. Um, so I wanted to take this job to learn whatās going on on the payer side.
[00:32:12] How does that work? Cause I had my, my vision Iāve, uh, Iāve cursed out insurance companies for enough, enough of my career that I decided, well, letās see if I can figure out whatās broken on that side. Um, and uh, so I can do my work. Uh, remotely, um, you know, I was driving to work, um, every day, uh, March 16th, they think was the last day, last year.
[00:32:36] And havenāt been back since, other than maybe sometime in the summer, I went and got some, some things there. You know, when we left, we didnāt, we didnāt know that we would be gone for a year. Uh, so, um, Iām able to do my work remotely at home. So Iām blessed that. Uh, th that I can do that. There are a lot of jobs where people cannot, um, but the [00:33:00] impact on people has certainly taken a toll.
[00:33:04] Obviously thereās the physical toll, if you get COVID, but, um, a lot more depression and anxiety, uh, weāre certainly seeing during COVID, um, uh, addiction and use of substances has gone up. Um, you know, itās like, well, some people have a lot of time on their hands. Um, others are self-treating maybe, uh, the rate of alcohol consumption has gone up tremendously.
[00:33:32] Um, and so that has had, you know, a very significant impact. I think just the loneliness. Thereās a lot of people that are lonely, a lot of social disruption. Um, obviously all the other. Negative consequences of COVID financial problems, loss of jobs, um, you know, kids in school, um, people going to college and kind of uncertainty about all those things, uh, losing friends and family to [00:34:00] COVID, uh, people that, that have died.
[00:34:02] Um, so these are a lot of, um, uh, consequences that are hitting us, um, kind of in, in, in the brain, if you will. Um, I think, uh, you know, some groups are hit harder than others, uh, indigenous people, people of color, uh, people that donāt have access to a broadband, um, you know, uh, it used to be before COVID that you could not provide treatment just over a regular phone, um, and get paid for it.
[00:34:37] Uh, and that changed with COVID and weāre still trying to figure out how are we going to keep that change? Uh, you know, I would argue that we should, there are lots of people that even without COVID, um, have limited access to treatment, if youāre working three jobs, uh, just to keep, um, your family fed pre COVID.
[00:34:57] Um, you donāt have a lot of time to [00:35:00] take three buses to get to the doctorās office for your regular, you know, medical checkup. Um, and so having other ways to do that, um, ways that are more convenient, um, uh, I hopefully will go a long way. It certainly seems, it certainly seems that way. Um, so weāre, weāre, itās, itās odd though, that something so terrible has caused such. Positive changes in our healthcare system. It shouldnāt have to take that, but it did.
[00:35:29] Brett: [00:35:29] Yeah. W do you think that, uh, as things quote, unquote, head back to normal, uh, that there will be. Uh, w weāll weāll the things weāve learned in the advances weāve made in medical care, uh, move forward or what they revert your prediction.
[00:35:49] Steve: [00:35:49] I predict itās going to be hard to put that genie back in the bottle. Uh, so I think that, uh, tell the, all the telehealth, um, advances that weāve made. Um, [00:36:00] I think most of them will stay with us. I think that, um, we will see much more. Weāre seeing it now, um, uh, digital therapeutics, uh, different words for it, but essentially using technology, um, and, uh, data population, health concepts.
[00:36:22] Um, using those sorts of tools to, uh, get help to people identify who needs help, um, make them available. I think weāre gonna see a lot more of that in COVID weāve had to, weāve had to change gears. Um, otherwise thereās no way to, uh, get people the help. Um, I think it will be overall positive changes. I sure hope.
[00:36:48] That weāll see a reduction in the cost of care. You know, uh, our country spends, you know, two to three times more than any other country does, uh, per person on [00:37:00] healthcare. And a lot of that goes to, you know, well, some of it at least goes to like administrative costs and so forth. Thereās a lot of overhead.
[00:37:07] Um, and itās long been argued that we spend, you know, for what weāre getting weāre spending way too much. Um, But itās been hard to figure out. Okay, well, where are you going to cut without losing quality, without losing access to care. Weāre kind of forced to figure that out now.
[00:37:27] Brett: [00:37:27] yeah. All right. So last question, before we get to some top three picks, uh, I assume that as a practicing psychiatrist, you take a lot of notes. What is your favorite way of taking notes?
[00:37:44] Steve: [00:37:44] Uh, for, I donāt know how long itās been. Um, so you, your product a and V out. Uh, actually I use notational velocity before, um,
[00:37:55] Brett: [00:37:55] be clear. This was not me fishing.
[00:37:58] Steve: [00:37:58] I know, but, but, but, [00:38:00] uh, youāre, youāre going to get the fish anyway. Um, you know, uh, I use that every day. That is my main note taking tool. Um, you know, so I use Mark I type in Mark down.
[00:38:16] Um, so I use a lot of asterisks and other, um, uh, markdown tools. Cause it just makes a lot of sense. Um, to me and, uh, uh, what I, what I really like about it is that, um, you know, Iāve developed kind of a workflow for note taking, um, and, uh, that workflow has certainly evolved over the years, but having some kind of tool that allows me to immediately, um, find all the notes that have certain words or phrases in it.
[00:38:50] Um, is, uh, incredibly helpful, um, as well as having a tool that allows me to hyperlink between notes to connect [00:39:00] those threads. Um, so, you know, th th the concept of a Zettel Castin, uh, is something I certainly read, uh, a fair amount about and learned. You know, picked up some tips about, um, how to write notes in a way, you know, back in, uh, medical school.
[00:39:19] So hereās, uh, uh, you know, youāve talked about your, um, uh, your ADHD and how that has affected your life. Um, so, you know, I have been diagnosed with ADHD as well. Um, Iām not taking any medications for that now. Uh, but, uh, I have had, you know, uh, Iāve been, uh, kind of, uh, a high performing kid, um, and never at least in high school and college didnāt really need to work too hard.
[00:39:50] Iām not trying to brag. Itās just kind of how I found it to be. Um, I nearly flunked out of medical school, uh, because of, because of this, the F uh, [00:40:00] in, in the first year of medical school, I used the same stuff. Poor study habits that I had in college, which was, um, a lot of last minute cramming, um, uh, procrastination, um, uh, you know, being in a lecture, listening.
[00:40:19] I learned a lot from that, um, reading, um, I, you know, I would sometimes get into it, but I, it was just very easy to get distracted. And so I had poor study habits. Um, and in medical school your first year, youāre, youāre like, you know, a typical, uh, semester in college is like, um, 15 credits, five classes, right?
[00:40:44] Uh, uh, three hours a week. And in medical school, instead of taking like five classes, itās more like taking 20 classes. Um, all at once, all through the same time. Um, and I use the same techniques I use, I [00:41:00] used in college and that failed me terribly. Um, and I started to do poorly and it really took, um, uh, you know, kind of a, okay.
[00:41:10] Either figure it out or youāre out of here. Before I finally said to myself, okay, Iām doing something wrong. Iāve got to change. Iāve got to do something. Um, and at that time I wasnāt thinking it was, um, it was, um, ADHD or anything like that. I just thought I had, you know, uh, bad habits, bad study habits. I just needed to try harder, try harder.
[00:41:32] And so thatās what I did. I tried harder to try harder. Um, and. And that did work. I mean, I, but it meant that I always had a book in my hand. I was always writing notes. I wasnāt typing notes back then. I was, everything was handwritten, a lot of highlighting and so forth. And I just overdid all of that stuff.
[00:41:53] Um, just to, uh, you know, finally, um, uh, succeed, but I was eight, but I [00:42:00] was able to, um, and, and after I, but, but I had to do some sort of. Mental gear shifting. And I canāt even, itās hard for me to define what that was, but thatās what it, but thatās what it took. Um, and, uh, you know, I have tried, um, uh, myself, a few of the medications that are used to treat.
[00:42:20] Um, ADHD, um, at times in my life when, um, I thought, well, maybe that would help. Um, it did help, but I did not like how it made me feel. I felt very speedy, kind of wired feeling on stimulants. Um, you know, I, I tried, uh, some other medications like, uh, uh, Wellbutrin or bupropion, um, Effexer, which has Venlafaxineās, which are sometimes used to treat these conditions.
[00:42:47] And, um, they gave me kind of odd side effects that I didnāt like. So, you know, after I tried a couple of years different medicines, but I just didnāt find that I was too, uh, too helpful. [00:43:00] Um, w w w tell me about, you know, your experience with those types of medicines and side effects.
[00:43:06] Brett: [00:43:06] this is really funny because the question was about notes, but Iām happy to talk about this. Um, so like as a, uh, former. Cocaine. And at some point meth addict, uh, the idea of feeling speedy wasnāt, uh, Iām not sure reverse to that. Um, I definitely, I S uh, I was on a med called Vyvanse for a long time, and Vyvanse did not give me that speedy feeling, but it also wasnāt terribly effective.
[00:43:38] Um, The, the drug that has been the most useful to me is Focalin, which is closer to, uh, uh, Ritalin Vyvanse is in the Adderall family. Um, so like I donāt function without, uh, ADHD medication. And [00:44:00] part of it is, uh, itās combined with bipolar depression. Um, I just, plus when Iām not medicated for ADHD, my addictive tendencies, uh, I have lower impulse control.
[00:44:12] So that leads to just general problems. Even if itās not drug abuse, itās just addiction in general. Um, so Iāve been willing to accept the kind of physical side effects of ADHD medication because they allow me to function the way I see everyone else functioning. Which
[00:44:33] Steve: [00:44:33] Well then. Yeah. Um, so the, the connection to me with the note taking is that I find that. Um, like I did back in medical school by focusing on the process of making notes, writing notes, typing notes, um, that, that becomes almost like a focus for me and [00:45:00] helps me pay attention more and improve my memory.
[00:45:03] Cause if I write something down, if Iām typing something, um, um, especially if I use it soon afterwards, Um, I find that I remember it better. And that was one of the tricks that I learned in medical school was just by doing more of this kind of note-taking highlighting, make things yellow and pink and so forth.
[00:45:23] Um, it, it, for me, it kind of built a bit of a mental map, like a geographical map almost and helped me, like I could envision a page and where certain words were on the page and that somehow helped me. Help me remember, um, uh, what it was I was trying to learn. Um, and so using those types of these types of, uh, tools, like, you know, uh, like envy all for example, and by the way, okay.
[00:45:52] Iām going to, uh, envy ultra, which is like your, how, I donāt know how you would describe it, but, um, [00:46:00] is that something thatās going to be coming out?
[00:46:02] Brett: [00:46:02] I should hope so it, so, I mean, basically right now, uh, Fletcher my partner on this. Is, uh, heās going through a lot of stuff that is not related to NBA ultra, uh, in addition to being an ER doctor in the middle of a pandemic. Um, so things are moving slowly, but we are absolutely like on the precipice of release.
[00:46:26] Uh, I just need him to find a little more time and, uh, and weāll get that out there. We are pretty much anyone who directly asks me to be on the beta at this point. Weāre not mass adding anybody, but. You and anyone else listening who wants to be on the beta? Just email me and weāll get you up and running with NBA ultra.
[00:46:48] Steve: [00:46:48] Well, thatās cool that the name is funny, cause it makes me think of a certain CIA
[00:46:52] Brett: [00:46:52] I know MK ultra itās. We, we did the, they was supposed to be a code name. It was just supposed to be a [00:47:00] temporary envy envy ultra wordplay code name. We never found a better name for it, or I should say we never agreed on a better name for it. I thought I had some great ideas. He thought he had some great ideas.
[00:47:12] We couldnāt, we couldnāt come to a two person consensus.
[00:47:20] Steve: [00:47:20] Um, um, uh, that, that is something that Iāve been in fact, Iāve, I dallied with a couple of things. Um, uh, I thought I thought Rome was gonna, um, kind of fit the bill, but, um, I, I havenāt found that I got very frustrated with it and, um, it hasnāt been easy to use. Uh, and I think they, theyāre not using text-based notes.
[00:47:42] Um, you canāt just save a bunch
[00:47:44] Brett: [00:47:44] Theyāre not actual files. Right.
[00:47:46] Steve: [00:47:46] Yeah. Yeah, yeah. And, and the whole idea of getting something, you know, Iāve gone through, I donāt know how many computers, um, in, in my, in my life so far, but, um, uh, you know, to have things on, in formats that [00:48:00] down the road, uh, I wonāt be able to access is just not something Iām willing to
[00:48:04] Brett: [00:48:04] Yeah, that is very much the philosophy behind notational velocity and VL MBL. Is this, this idea of portable portable notes in regards to what you were saying before. I have a hundred percent found that if I take notes on something while itās happening, I rarely even need to go look at my notes because just the act of taking the note helps me remember what happened.
[00:48:26] Steve: [00:48:26] exactly. I find, I find the same thing, um, as well. Uh, and, uh, I, in fact, I sometimes will. Uh, like I might be listening to a podcast, um, and somebody is talking about something and Iāll pause it and go, you know, do what I need to do so that I can take some notes about it. Cause just listening about it. Um, you know, Iāll hear it and Iāll think, Oh, I wanna check that out later.
[00:48:52] But if I donāt write it down, itās out of sight out of mind and itās gone before, you know, it. So Iāve got to stop and [00:49:00] do something to capture it. Just that capture is almost like taking a picture and then I have it.
[00:49:05] Brett: [00:49:05] you use mind maps at all?
[00:49:08] Steve: [00:49:08] Iāve tried to mess with mind maps a number of times. Um, I canāt get into it. I donāt know why. But it, cause you would think from some of the things Iāve said that, uh, um, that would work well. Although most of the, my maps Iāve done have been, um, you know, like on a computer rather than on a piece of paper, Iāve done it on a piece of paper and I get frustrated cause I run out of room.
[00:49:32] Brett: [00:49:32] Sure. Yeah, Tony, Tony Pizan was a huge proponent of like, you have to do it on paper, up until. Uh, probably the mid two thousands, but like I never enjoyed doing it on paper because I like to be able to move things around. Thatās part of the magic for
[00:49:50] Steve: [00:49:50] Yeah,
[00:49:50] Brett: [00:49:50] is as I choose to like jot down these notes and dump out ideas and, and, and concepts that are coming up, I just.
[00:49:58] I can just dump them [00:50:00] onto the screen and then I can organize them and then I can start to make the connections and see what relates to what, and like itās perfect for me. And itās very much, uh, itās uh, there are two kinds of people. There are people who mind map and people who donāt. And for some people, like I would never push mind mapping on anybody because it just doesnāt seem to click for some people the way it clicks for me.
[00:50:27] Steve: [00:50:27] Yeah.
[00:50:29] Brett: [00:50:29] All right.
[00:50:29] Steve: [00:50:29] Uh, I Iām, Iām conscious of the time. And, uh, top three picks.
[00:50:35] Brett: [00:50:35] yes. Let me do a quick sponsor break.
[00:50:38] Steve: [00:50:38] You got it.
[00:50:39] Brett: [00:50:39] Actually. Iām just going to add that, edit that in later, but all right. So now top three picks. Tell me what you got. Uh,
[00:50:47] Steve: [00:50:47] Um, so, you know, it changes every time I think about it. Uh, so the first thing I thought of, um, is something I keep coming to, so I do, uh, [00:51:00] photography, Iām a hobbyist, um, but, um, uh, really enjoy, um, photography, mostly landscape. Um, nature, um, you know, some street photography and, uh, I came across, um, a book by photographer, David Lubbers, um, and the book is called persistence of vision.
[00:51:23] You can, if you just Google it, youāll find some, some of the pictures out there. And what he did in this book was. He found heās a, you know, a professional photographer. He makes his living doing photography. And, um, he went through his photographs and he found, uh, you know, dyads of photographs to photographs.
[00:51:47] The technical word for this is dip tick, um, and, uh, put. Them, uh, one on the left and one of the rights. So each time you flip a page, youāve got a new set, a new pair of photos [00:52:00] and the one on the left and one on the right. Um, Jay, what he does is, um, matches photos that have elements that are very similar, but theyāre different photos or like from different times, like different years, different locations.
[00:52:18] Um, but there might be, for example, on the left, there might be an S curve of a stream. And on the right, there might be the same exact location, everything S curve, but of sand, um, in a desert. Um, and itās a series of these pictures. And what I really like about it is that he doesnāt tell you whatās the same.
[00:52:41] So this is really something that the observer, the reader is looking at and noticing, Oh, Oh, look, thereās a rock over here and thereās that same type of rock over here. And, um, you know, it, it makes you think, um, and it makes me think Iāve got, I donāt know, [00:53:00] probably 30,000 photographs, um, all on, all on backed up hard drives, so I donāt lose them.
[00:53:06] Um, uh, but this concept of finding photos that are similar. Um, and tell a bit of a story is just fascinating to me. So I started to try to do something like that myself. So, um, uh, any photographers out there? Um, I would suggest take a look at his book.
[00:53:26] Brett: [00:53:26] nice. Um, itās kind of like those, uh, those funny pages spot the difference between the two photos, but opposite.
[00:53:34] Steve: [00:53:34] Yes. I remember going to the dentist and reading highlights.
[00:53:39] Brett: [00:53:39] of course.
[00:53:40] Steve: [00:53:40] Well, there were some things in highlights like that, where youāre trying to find whatās changed.
[00:53:44] Brett: [00:53:44] Yup. Yup.
[00:53:46] Steve: [00:53:46] Um, okay. A second thing, um, is, uh, something kind of more general, uh, the internet archive, the way back machine and all the other things that are associated with that, [00:54:00] um, you know, just in the past week, Um, I went in there to, you know, I, me and two other psychiatrists did a podcast for several years called my three shrinks.
[00:54:12] And I think weāve got about 70, um, episodes. Uh, we havenāt done them for a number of years, but, uh, I had, you know, I didnāt, um, renew the, um, the domain and then all the files went away. And where are my files while theyāre on some hard drive somewhere? Well, it turns out, um, uh, way back, caught them all, including the audio files.
[00:54:36] Um, and, um, I, uh, Iāll share a link with you, uh, so that readers that they want to listen to any of them, they can, but that got me digging deeper into what is on the internet archive. Um, and, uh, some of the, you know, so during COVID, um, there were, theyāve really doubled down on. Um, [00:55:00] get making more books available, um, through, uh, the archive.
[00:55:05] And so thereās a lot more, um, uh, uh, books, I think thereās, you know, thereās obviously it backs up webpages like nobodyās business. I think thereās like a half a trillion web pages on there that are all searchable through keyword searching and so forth. Um, and, uh, lots of audio recordings, music spoken, word sound effects.
[00:55:26] Uh, Podcasts, uh, videos too. Thereās old, you know, movies and things like that. Um, thereās just so much there. Um, and itās a, uh, itās truly a treasure trove. Uh, and if people donāt know about it, um, uh, you know, weāll, youāll put a link in the show notes too, that, but, uh, thereās just amazing stuff in the internet archive.
[00:55:51] So, um, that definitely deserves a, a strong mention.
[00:55:54] Brett: [00:55:54] Absolutely. I, uh, when I first, this, this podcast started on the five [00:56:00] by five network and not to malign anybody, but, uh, within a week of me moving to a different network, Uh, the first a hundred, some episodes were just gone from the internet removed. And, uh, I went back a couple years later and realized that they were all in the Wayback machine and I was able to retrieve.
[00:56:21] So the, the websiteās current pot, uh, podcasts, current website at, uh, system, what is it? Systematic pod.com now has like the full archive. And itās only possible because of the way back machine.
[00:56:35] Steve: [00:56:35] It saved our podcast too. Um, really, really, uh, you know, really amazing that thatās there. Um, and, uh, uh, just awesome. And lots of, um, uh, I, you know, like for example, I think thereās, theyāve got, um, Several million books, a lot of Saifai. Um, although itās curious, they had, so I looked at for Isaac [00:57:00] Asimov, right?
[00:57:01] Um, at least a hundred of his books are in there. Hi, uh, Robert Heinlein, none. Why is that? I donāt know. Uh, so itās got some quirkiness to it. Um, but, uh, uh, very useful. And I think I also found. Did I find that there? I think I did, um, our, you know, so the two psychiatrists, I mentioned, um, uh, Diana Miller and Anne Hanson.
[00:57:27] We also, you know, we, we had, uh, a blog, which we no longer write for, uh, which was called shrink wrap. Um, and then came the podcast, uh, my three shrinks, you see a theme here and then, you know, Diana had this great idea. Well, letās take the hundreds and hundreds of blog posts that we did and make a book out of it.
[00:57:48] Um, and, uh, if you ever tried to do something like that, it doesnāt work the way you think it would you, she thought, Oh, you just stitch stitch them all together and itād be fine. No. Uh, and [00:58:00] three of us, you know, um, arguing about, uh, okay. Uh, writing what weāre going to put in, what we donāt put in, but that book.
[00:58:08] Is, um, also, um, in the way back machine. So if you want it to buy, itās still, I think itās still, um, thereās some still print copies that are, um, um, out there. Uh, it came out in 2011, uh, but I was very pleased to see that itās also right there. Um, you know, uh, in the Wayback machine, well, itās actually not even part of the Wayback machine.
[00:58:29] Itās part of open library.org, uh, and, uh, they allow you to borrow a book for an hour. So itās really interesting to see that the three that even on the internet and the Wayback machine psychiatrist, um, you know, are doing their thing one hour at a time. I had to reach for that one. Sorry.
[00:58:53] Brett: [00:58:53] all right. Whatās number three.
[00:58:55] Steve: [00:58:55] Uh, number three is Sonic PI. Do you use your [00:59:00] musician? Have you used Sonic by.
[00:59:01] Brett: [00:59:01] I have not. Is PI P I or P I
[00:59:05] Steve: [00:59:05] T I, yeah, itās not Python. Itās PI like the Greek letter. Yeah, Sonic I, um, it is a, a downloadable executive bowl, um, that, uh, allows you to, um, make music by coding. So youāre essentially, um, writing code that, um, uh, spits out music. And as you tweak the code, the music changes. Um, if youāve ever used like, um, uh, like a Jupiter notebook, itās something like that.
[00:59:40] And the sense that by changing it, it, uh, the output immediately, um, um, comes out. And, uh, the, I think the guy that, that, that wrote it is Sam. Aaron, I think is his name. And heās got a number of, um, YouTube videos. Of him, you know, jamming with his computer, uh, [01:00:00] music, people dancing and so forth. Um, and you know, what I like about it is that, you know, youāre using code and mathematics to, uh, right to make sounds.
[01:00:12] And, um, there are some folks who have used Sonic PI to turn data into sound. Uh, and that concept just fascinates me. I havenāt quite figured out what to do with that. Thatās a patient, but itās just asking for something, check it, check it out. Iād love to, um, Iāll bet that youāll get turned on by this and, um, want to do something
[01:00:35] Brett: [01:00:35] Yeah, Iām worried. Iām worried that you just killed between one and a hundred hours of my productivity.
[01:00:40] Steve: [01:00:40] w well, thatās why I got into it one weekend and, and, um, havenāt been back to it yet because it. Itās hard to stop once you start. Um, thereās uh, on the, um, are you familiar with the calm app? So in that I thereās a, um, I [01:01:00] found a segment of, um, thereās an astrophysicist by the name of Matt Russo who took, uh, kind of the data of the stars and when they come out at night.
[01:01:14] So when they become visible as. Dusk settles tonight. Um, and, um, took a file with all of the star information and the intensity and the color. Um, and, um, when they come out, you know, kind of as, as it gets darker and darker and darker and created. Um, essentially there thereās one of the sound system sounds, I think itās called and the call map is that recording.
[01:01:44] And so for an hour, it starts off with a little thing Thing as stars become visible. And then over the course of an hour, it becomes kind of this Rawkus white noise sound. Um, but as [01:02:00] itās, as itās unfolding, it just has a very calm, soothing feel to it. And so, you know, taking data and making sound and music out of it.
[01:02:09] I love that, that concept. I just want to do something with it.
[01:02:12] Brett: [01:02:12] awesome. Iāll have to Iāll let you know how it goes. Iām absolutely going to play with
[01:02:17] Steve: [01:02:17] that. Yeah. Yeah, itās hard. Itās hard not to, once you start messing with it.
[01:02:22] Brett: [01:02:22] All right. Well, if people want to, uh, learn more about you or reach you, where can they look for you? Yeah.
[01:02:30] Steve: [01:02:30] Um, Ooh, probably the best way the best places are. Um, uh Iām so Iām on LinkedIn. Iāll put a, uh, a link in the show notes for my LinkedIn page. Um, and Iām on Twitter. Iām hit shrink. Those are the best two places.
[01:02:46] Brett: [01:02:46] All right. Cool. Well, thanks for your time today.
[01:02:51] Steve: [01:02:51] Really great to, uh, to have this extended conversation with probably one of my favorite software artists. So, yep.
[01:03:00] [01:02:59] Brett: [01:02:59] Thanks for putting up with my, uh, my, my addiction obsession and the, uh, in the questions.
[01:03:05] Steve: [01:03:05] My, my pleasure. Some things you want to feed.
[01:03:09] Brett: [01:03:09] all right. And thanks everyone for listening. Weāll see you again in a week.