Many people wait until they’re far enough into treatment that they can’t easily reconstruct the details. In Fairfield, that’s common when exposure involves:
- Homeowners or renters who hired a contractor for driveway, lawn, or slope treatment
- Property management or neighborhood maintenance crews handling common-area landscaping
- School, park, or event-adjacent areas where applications may occur before families notice changes
- Commuter-adjacent work (maintenance, grounds, or trades) where product use is routine but not tracked
Right now, focus on what you can preserve quickly:
- Photos of product labels (even partial labels), containers, or application notes
- Any receipt/invoice from a lawn service or contractor
- Dates you remember (approximate is fine) tied to seasonal application cycles
- Names of people involved: who applied it, who managed the property, and who may have witnessed application
- Medical records you already have: diagnosis letters, pathology reports, imaging summaries, and treatment summaries
If you’re missing the exact bottle, that doesn’t always end the conversation. The key is building a consistent exposure timeline with the best available sources.


