Many people first connect the dots after a diagnosis, a doctor’s discussion of risk factors, or information they see through news and community resources. In a practical sense, the process often looks like this:
- A diagnosis changes what questions doctors ask—and what documentation is created.
- Home records (purchases, brand changes, household storage) become important.
- Insurance paperwork starts arriving alongside treatment bills.
- Deadlines begin to matter more than people expect.
Florida has its own rules and timelines for filing claims, and product-liability cases can become document-heavy fast. The earlier you start organizing your materials, the more likely your attorney can build a complete picture of exposure and medical history.


