In New York, the difference between a claim that moves quickly and one that stalls is usually evidence readiness. A lawyer evaluating talc exposure and cancer injuries typically starts by building a tight “proof timeline,” focusing on:
- Diagnosis documentation: pathology reports, biopsy results, imaging, and oncology notes.
- Exposure story: which talc-containing products you used, roughly when, and how consistently.
- Consistency of records: how your medical timeline lines up with your history of use.
- Product traceability: brand names, packaging descriptions, where you purchased products, and whether any records exist (receipts, household accounts, or family recollections).
Instead of asking you to remember everything perfectly, counsel often helps you locate the missing pieces—especially important for people who used multiple brands over many years.


