You may have seen online tools that promise to “evaluate your case” or generate a message you can send to a law firm. Those can be useful for organizing questions, but they’re not a substitute for a lawyer reviewing your medical records, identifying which product lines matter, and assessing whether the facts support a claim.
In real life, Sanford families often juggle multiple responsibilities—so it’s common for exposure histories to be incomplete (“I used it for years,” “I’m not sure of the brand,” “it was in the bathroom cabinet”). A professional review helps turn scattered details into something that can be evaluated under product-liability standards.


