Before you think about settlement or legal strategy, make sure your medical care is on track. Then, while details are still fresh, focus on preserving the information that typically matters most in product-liability claims.
In real cases, residents often discover the hardest part isn’t the diagnosis—it’s reconstructing exposure history after the fact. That’s especially true if you (or a family member) used talc products sporadically over the years or changed brands.
What to do now (practical checklist):
- Write down approximate timelines: when use began, when symptoms started, and when you received a diagnosis.
- Gather medical records you already have (pathology reports, biopsy results, imaging summaries, treatment notes).
- Save anything product-related: labels, containers, old photos of packaging, or even retailer receipts if you can locate them.
- Keep a log of where the product was stored and how it was used (bathroom routines, caregiving use, laundry room storage, etc.).
Even if you don’t have every label anymore, a careful timeline and credible documentation can still help attorneys narrow down which product lines deserve investigation.


