In toxic exposure cases, delays can hurt more than they should. In New Albany—where people may commute, work rotating schedules, or rely on shared housing and workplaces—symptoms may be reported days after exposure, while key evidence is lost even faster.
A fast, organized approach typically includes:
- Medical visit timing: Get evaluated and describe your symptoms, suspected substance, and when you noticed changes.
- Exposure timeline: Write down dates and times for shifts, odors/fumes, cleanup events, deliveries, repairs, or maintenance.
- Property/workplace records: Ask for incident reports, safety logs, ventilation/maintenance notes, product information, and any testing.
- Preservation: Save lab results, photos, emails/texts, and any notices you received.
AI-supported intake can make this easier by turning your scattered details into a usable chronology your lawyer can verify—but the underlying records still need to be accurate and complete.


