In Edinburg, many cases begin the same way: a diagnosis happens, then the household history gets revisited late at night while paperwork piles up. Instead of trying to remember everything at once, start building a simple, attorney-friendly timeline:
- When symptoms started (even approximate months/years)
- When you were diagnosed and what testing confirmed it
- What talc-containing products were used (brand names if known)
- How long use continued and who used the products (you, a partner, a caregiver)
- Where the products came from (local retailers, online orders, household inventory from a family member)
Why this matters: Texas courts and insurers tend to look for consistency—between the medical record and the exposure history. A clean timeline helps your attorney spot missing documents early and reduce back-and-forth later.


