We see the same challenge in many Ohio communities: exposure happened through routine yard work, farm-and-landscaping maintenance, or household proximity to applied areas, and the details fade quickly.
In Piqua, that can look like:
- Applying weed control at home and later discovering a diagnosis years afterward
- Working in roles tied to outdoor maintenance or property upkeep
- Living near areas where weed killers were applied for property management
When product packaging is gone and exact dates are fuzzy, the case usually turns on whether you can reconstruct:
- What you were exposed to (product type/ingredient consistency)
- When and how exposure occurred (timeline)
- How the illness developed (medical record sequence)
A faster path to settlement usually requires a faster, cleaner record.


