When people reach out after a diagnosis, they’re often missing the “small” details that matter most later—brand names, approximate dates, and documentation that tends to disappear. Start here:
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Write a simple exposure timeline (even if it’s not perfect)
- Which talc products you used (brand, form, where you bought them)
- Rough start/stop dates and frequency
- Any changes in packaging or product type
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Collect medical documents in one place
- Pathology or biopsy reports
- Imaging and specialist notes
- Treatment summaries and follow-up plans
- Any written materials your doctor gave you about suspected causes
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Preserve product identifiers
- Photos of labels/boxes if you still have them
- Receipts, pharmacy/market purchase records, or account history
- If you don’t have the container, capture what you remember (label colors, approximate packaging style, retailer type)
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Create a “treatment + cost” folder
- Bills, insurance explanations of benefits (EOBs), and out-of-pocket receipts
- Notes about missed work, reduced hours, or inability to perform normal duties
In California, missing key records early can slow everything down. The sooner you organize, the sooner counsel can evaluate settlement viability and avoid avoidable delays.


