Time matters after exposure. Not just for medical care—also for preserving evidence that can prove what happened.
Do these first (in order):
- Get medical care immediately if symptoms are severe, worsening, or involve breathing, burns, dizziness, or fainting.
- Tell the clinician about the exposure (what you were around, where you were, and when symptoms started). Even if you’re not 100% sure which chemical it was, your timeline is critical.
- Document your incident while it’s fresh—write down the date/time, location (work area, nearby property, or event venue), conditions (wind, rain, odors), and what you observed (leaks, fumes, spill response, warning signs).
- Request incident and safety records connected to the event—such as workplace incident reports, SDS/safety data sheets, monitoring logs, and any communications about the release.
In Sand Springs, exposures can occur in a range of day-to-day settings, including industrial work areas, maintenance activities, and community-adjacent situations. The sooner you capture records, the stronger your ability to connect the exposure to your treatment.


