When exposure happened years ago—or when it involved a property owner, a landlord’s contractor, or repeated lawn/yard treatments—your strongest advantage is organization.
Start by preserving:
- Medical records: pathology reports, biopsy results (if any), imaging summaries, diagnosis dates, and treatment plans.
- Exposure proof you can still obtain: product labels/photos, receipts, emails/texts about yard service, and any maintenance logs.
- Timeline notes: when symptoms began, when you first sought care, and when you remember herbicide use in or around your home.
- Work and commute context: if you were in maintenance, landscaping, facilities, or a role with outdoor work near major Delaware routes, document that too.
Why this matters in Wilmington: records for property maintenance (especially from rental units or contractors) can be harder to recover once tenants move or companies change. The sooner you gather what you can, the smoother the next steps tend to be.


