Your first priority is safety and medical documentation.
- Get medical attention right away (or as soon as symptoms show up). Even if you think the injury is “minor,” delayed reporting can weaken the connection between the product and your harm.
- Preserve the product evidence. If you still have the item, keep it in the condition it was in after the incident. If it was discarded, take photos of anything that remains—packaging, labels, manuals, or storage containers.
- Collect recall paperwork. Save the recall notice, any safety bulletin, and screenshots showing the date and the product identifiers.
In Algonquin, many residents learned about recalls after the fact—often through online alerts, big-box retailer communications, or community chatter. If you received notice after you were already injured, you’ll still want to document the “before and after” timeline because insurers may argue the recall is unrelated or that your injuries have another cause.


