[Speaker 1] If the patient does not disclose his or her comorbidities like diabetes, blood pressure or any other like HIV, and there is a complication, it may or may not be related. Can we defend ourselves? [Speaker 2] Yes, it is suppressive falsi. Because if patient is suppressing something which is importantly needed for the doctor and doctor since are not aware and continued the treatment and some complication occur, then liability goes on a patient where negligence can be proven against the patient, not against the doctor. And that's the reason why when we see on OPD paper also, we have learned in academic year, we advise the doctor to use those days learning for your OPD paper where we write chief complaint of on examination or history of. Because in history of we do write everything. And if it is missed in that, that part is a very great defense in a court of law saying that patient has not given a history, that is the reason it is not mentioned here and we can have a defense on that.