People often reach out after something changes—an official diagnosis, a specialist visit, a medication plan, or a doctor’s note suggesting additional investigation. In a place like Richmond Heights, where many families rely on steady commuting and routine care, the “wait and see” approach can quietly become a problem.
Common triggers we hear include:
- A new diagnosis that appears to match an environmental exposure pattern
- A delayed symptom timeline that doesn’t feel “straightforward”
- Confusion about what to request from military archives or past providers
- Difficulty connecting medical documentation to when and where exposure may have occurred


