Many people around the Gulf Coast first connect their symptoms to Camp Lejeune only after something changes—an official diagnosis, a specialist consult, a medical note referencing risk factors, or a family member urging them to review prior exposure history.
It’s common for the evidence to be scattered. One provider may hold lab results, another may have imaging reports, and older treatment notes might be hard to obtain. Meanwhile, your day-to-day responsibilities—work, caregiving, and appointments—don’t stop.
That’s why your next move should be organized, not rushed. The goal is to build a clear, defensible timeline linking where you were during relevant periods and when your health issues began.


