Many people in the Houma area don’t experience exposure in one dramatic moment. Instead, it builds through everyday patterns—such as:
- caring for residential yards and landscaping season after season
- working in roles where grounds maintenance or weed control is part of the job
- nearby application around homes, rental properties, or common areas
- secondary exposure in household settings when contaminated residue is brought indoors
- travel and event seasons, when people may not realize product use is happening nearby
Because exposure is frequently spread out, the hardest part is documenting a timeline that makes sense to medical providers and insurers. The sooner you start organizing that story, the easier it is for your attorney to evaluate next steps.


