Many Camp Lejeune inquiries begin years after exposure—sometimes after a diagnosis that shows up long after service or residence. In a place like Moorhead, where many families coordinate healthcare across multiple providers and systems, it’s common for medical records to be scattered across:
- different clinics and specialists
- prior hospital systems
- pharmacy networks with separate prescription histories
- paper records that were never fully digitized
When that happens, the biggest risk isn’t that you don’t care—it’s that the claim story becomes inconsistent or incomplete. A strong case usually turns on tight documentation: where you were, when you were there, and what your doctors say about onset and progression.


