In Dunwoody, many exposures happen in everyday settings: residential lawns, landscaping around homes, HOA-managed common areas, and routine yard maintenance schedules. Others involve workers who handle vegetation control for properties or commercial sites.
That matters because, in most weed killer injury cases, the dispute isn’t usually “do you have a serious condition?” It’s whether the record supports:
- When exposure likely occurred (and how often)
- What products were used and whether they match the chemical at issue
- How the illness timeline lines up with medical findings
- Whether experts can explain causation in a way decision-makers accept
A diagnosis is important—but it’s rarely the only piece needed for settlement.


