Many people contact us after a doctor visit in which symptoms finally get a name—or after a diagnosis arrives that seems out of character. In Bartlett (and across Shelby County), that often means juggling care while trying to reconstruct the past: where you lived or served, when you were at specific locations, and when symptoms began.
That timeline matters because Camp Lejeune-related cases depend on connecting exposure to later illness using credible records—not guesswork.
During a consultation, we typically start by mapping:
- Dates tied to your service or residence history
- Medical records showing diagnosis and progression
- Any documentation you already have (and what you may need to request)
Even if you’re still collecting information, you don’t have to “have everything” to begin. What you do need is an organized starting point—and guidance on what to gather next.


