In the Greater Cincinnati area, exposure can happen in ways that don’t look the same from one household to the next—especially across suburbs, rentals, and neighborhoods with frequent lawn/landscaping work.
Common local scenarios include:
- Suburban property maintenance (driveways, landscaping beds, fence lines) where products may be bought and used between weekends.
- Rental turnover where a tenant didn’t buy the product, but the yard or common areas still get treated.
- Landscaping and maintenance work for contractors moving between sites across Hamilton County and beyond.
- Seasonal timing—spring and early fall applications—when symptoms later emerge and memories become harder to pin down.
Because of this, people often arrive with partial information: a diagnosis date, vague recall of “weed killer,” and a few medical documents. A faster review starts with tightening that story into something verifiable.


