In communities like Statesboro, the exposure pathway is frequently tied to practical routines—commuting, job tasks, seasonal construction, and shared indoor air.
Instead of focusing only on “I feel sick,” your first goal should be to capture details that help a legal team connect symptoms to a specific cause:
- Where you were when symptoms began (worksite, school, apartment, venue, jobsite trailer, etc.)
- What changed around that time (new chemical use, ventilation issues, remediation, renovation dust, water damage, pest-control treatments)
- How you were exposed (fumes, dust, skin contact, water, smoke/odor, recurring contact during shifts)
- Who else noticed the same odors/conditions or complained internally
AI tools can support this by organizing your dates, medical notes, and communications into a usable timeline—so your attorney can see patterns quickly. But the case still depends on verifiable records.


