In a smaller community like Chickasha, exposures can be tied to repeat local workflows—meaning the same facility, contractor, or worksite may be involved over time. People typically come to us after one of these situations:
- Construction and maintenance work: exposure during painting, coating removal, solvent use, welding/torch operations, or chemical cleaning.
- Workplace chemical handling: irritant or toxic fumes from cleaning agents, disinfectants, degreasers, acids/caustics, or mislabeled products.
- Agricultural and equipment-related exposures: contact with pesticides, herbicides, or chemical residues on equipment and storage areas.
- Cleanup after a release: fumes or skin contact during spill response, broken containers, or improper disposal.
- Community spill or odor events: symptoms that flare after an unusual odor, nearby activity, or air-quality disruption.
Oklahoma cases can turn quickly on documentation—what was used, when it was used, what safety steps were taken, and how soon symptoms appeared.


