Many claimants contact us after months of medical visits, pharmacy refills, and specialists—often while also managing commuting and caregiving responsibilities in the greater Monterey County area.
In Camp Lejeune-type cases, that day-to-day life matters because your case will rise or fall on (1) exposure evidence and (2) how your medical history is documented. That means:
- Symptom history must be anchored to dates your doctors recorded, not just when you first noticed something.
- Exposure timelines need support from service or residence records that can be verified.
- Gaps in paperwork can happen—especially when records are spread across providers or were obtained years ago.
When people wait too long, their ability to reconstruct details decreases. When they rush without organizing records, they often end up with incomplete answers that delay evaluation.


