Many people come in with a diagnosis name and a growing worry. But in environmental exposure cases, the strongest starting point is usually a clear timeline: when you were stationed, living, working, training, or otherwise present during the relevant period, and when symptoms began or changed.
For Lafayette residents, that often looks like coordinating records across multiple providers—something that can be complicated when your care is split between local practices, specialists, and hospital systems across the Front Range. Before you talk to anyone else (including insurers), gather what you can:
- Service or housing documentation that shows where you were and when
- Medical records showing onset, progression, and treatment
- Any pharmacy history, imaging reports, and specialist notes
- A written chronology of symptoms (even if it’s imperfect)
If you’ve tried an AI camp lejeune lawyer tool to “summarize” your situation, consider this your reality check: AI can help you organize questions, but it can’t confirm whether your specific timeline and records support the legal elements.


