In the Chicago-area suburbs, exposure stories often share a pattern: product use at home, landscaping or lawn-care services, or herbicide applications along nearby property lines. Over time, details get lost—especially if a label was tossed or a container was replaced.
Before you reach out for help, start stacking proof in three buckets:
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Medical proof
- Diagnosis letters, pathology reports, imaging summaries, treatment plans, and follow-up notes.
- A clear timeline of when symptoms started and when doctors confirmed the condition.
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Exposure proof
- Photos of the product (if you still have them), receipts, or any label information.
- Notes on where exposure happened (yard, driveway, rental unit, shared building area) and who handled the application.
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Context proof
- If a lawn-care company or maintenance crew applied weed killer, gather any invoices, service schedules, or communications.
- If exposure happened near where you work or commute, write down dates and locations while details are fresh.
When you have these items organized, consultations tend to move faster—because the conversation becomes about next steps, not basic fact-finding.


