 While talking about client's access to records, the second part consists of the two other important things. Previously, we talked about the medical records and psychotherapy notes, now coming towards the forensic reports. These reports involve data collected and reports written specifically for the use in legal context. When a report is written specifically for forensic evaluation in a specific scenario, it is certified by a different document. Such reports for the court might include information on competency to stand trial, criminal responsibility and child custody evaluations. When we are writing these forensic notes, they have a specific purpose. This court helps the judge, for example, if there is a family discote and a forensic analysis of a scenario is written by a therapist, then it is decided who should be given the child's custody. Or in the same way, what individual is eligible for criminal responsibility. For example, if a child is harmed in a family metric, then who will be responsible for it? Until its forensic evaluation, it will not be understood which family member's negligence or lack of responsibility has taken place and what criminal responsibility is being alleged. Although such reports may occasionally include health information, their purpose and utility focused onto the legal system and may be governed by the court rules and orders. These forensic reports have different aspects. For example, a family discote where a child has been harmed and their criminal responsibility is to be fixed on a family member. Let's say the father in the family has already had a health issue, which is why we cannot fix that responsibility. Then we have to give privilege to that person because he is not capable enough to take care of a child properly. So we have to see for the alternative who are usually being served as a guardian for that child and we will try to judge that responsibility. For example, some court ordered forensic reports may be sealed by the court and not released even with the consent of the person addressed in the report. As a scenario where a criminal responsibility is fixed and people's prior records, medical records, their psychotherapy notes, their history is taken, so until that concern is asked from the person, the court seals that judgment and they are not allowed to open until we get the consent of that particular person. At times, a client may also agree in advance. First, he says, okay, I have this data, you can share it now. But later, he says that he does not want my information to be disclosed. So these kinds of things can create a troublesome situation. In case of some pre-employment or independent medical evaluation examinations, sometimes an individual goes for his pre-employment assessment and there certain problems are faced during the assessment. For example, nowadays, a lot of multinational companies hire psychologists to make their client's personality profile. In that personality profile, accidentally, the individual's lead says that the depression score is very high and he says that he does not want my information to be released openly later and he does not give his consent for that. And he says, okay, I do not want a job, but I do not want you to open my status. So that is the right of the client that he does not want his health status to be publicly displayed on a company's platform. So these are the four different kinds of the records that we are talking about and forensic practice standards particularly ensure that client has reasonably being informed and informed consent has been used regarding the purpose of interview and the parties who will access the data even through the unenthusiastically given whether or not. But the thing that the consent has given once, it can be accessed. Now, another thing is the working notes. They refer to those impressions, hypotheses and half-formed ideas that a mental health professional or a trainee may jot down to assist in formulating more comprehensive reports and recommendations later. So, in some situations, we are seeing a happening, we are looking at a psychotherapy procedure and we are taking different types of notes. All those notes can be taken by an intern, those notes can be taken by a psychotherapist himself. So those working notes have a very important contributory capacity and in some situations, you have formed a hypothesis in the early beginning that this patient seems to be in depression in the early age. Then you give some therapy notes and it seems like trends are going to bipolar or trends are going to some other personality disorder. So we confirm those things with the help of our notes. Often these notes are reworked into psychotherapy notes. Those notes can later become psychotherapy notes in psychotherapeutic interventions. Or a report used for the discussion with a supervisor or simply discarded as new data come to light. So, the notes of internies can sometimes be used for discussions with supervisors. And sometimes, after a new feature comes forward, those notes can be discarded altogether. Because of the speculative, implementationistic and temporary nature of such working notes, they may not have been meaning or utilized to anyone except to the person who made them. Because these impressions and their working are temporary, the working notes, as long as they are not transformed into psychotherapy notes, they are not that important at that time. And at times, they are simply discarded. And at times, their interpretation or their understanding can only be done by the intern or the psychotherapist who prepared them. So you can say that working notes are the preliminary notes and they may be discarded at times and they may be turned into a proper psychotherapeutic notes at later stage at some point of the time.