Many people first look into this issue after a diagnosis—sometimes months or years after symptoms begin. In Geneva, that often means coordinating care across multiple providers, juggling work schedules around commuting routes, and keeping track of documents that are spread across systems.
In Camp Lejeune-related matters, delays and confusion can hurt because the strongest cases usually align three things:
- Where exposure occurred and when
- When symptoms began and how they progressed
- How medical records describe possible causes
If your records are incomplete, your dates are approximate, or your providers used different terms over time, you may still have options—but you need a structured review.


