Many claims begin the same way: a diagnosis arrives months or years after service, training, residence, or employment connected to contaminated water. For Hanover-area families, the pressure often feels immediate—medical bills, missed work, school disruptions, and the stress of trying to explain symptoms that don’t fit neatly into a single appointment.
We often see people who:
- discover new information about Camp Lejeune exposure and realize their own housing or duty dates may overlap,
- have symptoms that worsen over time and require ongoing treatment,
- have records spread across multiple providers or incomplete documentation.
The key is building a record that holds up. In legal terms, that means pairing medical evidence with a defensible exposure timeline—not relying on assumptions.


