In a smaller community like Clinton, many exposures are discovered through “real life” signals—symptoms starting after a particular shift, after maintenance work, after a renovation, or after a change in how a building is being heated, cooled, or ventilated.
That timing matters legally. In Tennessee, your ability to connect your illness to the exposure often depends on having a credible record showing:
- When symptoms began
- What changed around that time (tasks, odors, dust, fumes, building repairs, water issues)
- How medical providers documented the condition and any suspected triggers
AI-supported review can help your attorney organize those dates and identify contradictions early—before the other side tries to frame your symptoms as unrelated.


