When exposure is suspected, speed matters—but speed without organization can hurt your case. Use this short plan while the details are still fresh:
- Lock in your medical timeline: save diagnosis dates, pathology/imaging reports, and the first notes where doctors connect symptoms to a chemical exposure history.
- Collect product proof quickly: photographs of any remaining bottles, labels, or storage areas. If the container is gone, gather receipts, brand names, and where/when you bought it.
- Write down the Somerset “where and when”: yard size, who applied it, whether it was done near a driveway/sidewalk, and the season. Many Kentucky exposures happen during spring/summer landscaping routines.
- Preserve employment and rental records: if you handled spraying at work, or if you lived in a rental where chemicals were applied between leases, those records can be critical.
- Avoid recorded “off the cuff” statements to insurance adjusters. You can still be cooperative—just don’t guess, and don’t provide opinions about what happened before your facts are organized.
If you’re wondering how to get started fast, think in terms of evidence you can show, not theories you hope are persuasive.


