Many people in New Iberia discover the problem only after years have passed—sometimes long after the product was used or the exposure happened. Common local scenarios include:
- Residential property maintenance (homeowners and routine lawn/yard work)
- Employment exposure tied to landscaping, groundskeeping, pest control, or agricultural work
- Secondary exposure in household settings—such as residue carried on clothing or shared outdoor spaces
- Paper trail gaps after moves, product containers being discarded, or receipts not kept
When the medical timeline and exposure timeline don’t line up cleanly, insurers often push back harder. The good news? You can still build a credible case by organizing what you have now and identifying what’s missing.


