For many families, the concern doesn’t start in a courtroom—it starts at home. Someone uses talc-based hygiene products for years, then learns about potential links to ovarian or other cancers, or a doctor raises questions after reviewing history. In a coastal suburb like Solana Beach, it’s common for households to:
- keep products stocked for long periods,
- switch brands gradually over the years,
- rely on caregivers or family members to manage “daily use” items,
- and lose packaging because routines are so familiar.
That can make evidence harder to reconstruct—especially when you’re also managing treatment schedules.
The key early question: what did you use, for how long, and what medical records support the timing and diagnosis? A lawyer’s job is to turn those details into a case theory that can survive scrutiny.


