Many people don’t connect the injury to a recall until weeks or months later—often after searching online, seeing a safety alert, or hearing about similar incidents. In a suburb like Medina, where families and caregivers are juggling schedules, that delay can have real consequences:
- Medical documentation may lag if symptoms are treated as minor at first.
- Receipts and product identifiers can be misplaced during returns, repairs, or cleanups.
- The product’s condition changes (parts replaced, packaging thrown away, items discarded).
When evidence fades, it becomes harder to show that the recalled hazard was the cause—not just a coincidence.


