Many Chino families discover potential Camp Lejeune-related illnesses years after service or residence. In day-to-day life—commutes, school schedules, work demands, and multiple medical providers—records often get scattered.
Common Chino-area scenarios we see include:
- Care split across systems (primary care in one place, specialists elsewhere)
- Treatment documents missing details like symptom onset dates or the reasoning behind causation discussions
- Relocation-related gaps, where address history or employment records aren’t easily retrievable
When documentation is incomplete, the legal work becomes more about reconstructing a credible timeline than arguing about a diagnosis name.


