Many people in the Seattle-area start researching only after a doctor flags possible environmental links or after symptoms worsen. In Renton, where families often juggle work, commute time, and medical appointments, it’s common for records to be spread across multiple providers, clinics, and years.
That’s why the first priority is organizing your timeline in a way that matches legal expectations—not just medical summaries.
What we typically help you build early on:
- A clean exposure timeline tied to service/residence history
- A symptom-and-diagnosis chronology (with dates you can document)
- A “records map” showing where key documents exist and what’s missing
This matters because delays in gathering records don’t just slow things down—they can make it harder to confirm details later.


