In Brenham, many exposures happen in everyday settings: a workplace task involving cleaning chemicals or solvents, dust during equipment maintenance, fumes from a heater or generator malfunction, or remediation/repairs after a water intrusion. The common problem isn’t that people lack concern—it’s that they can’t easily connect the dates.
An AI-supported intake process can help you build a date-anchored exposure timeline using what you already have:
- when symptoms began or worsened
- what task you were doing (or where you were staying)
- any environmental changes (weather events, renovations, ventilation changes)
- what you reported to a supervisor or property contact
That timeline matters because in Texas, insurance and defense teams frequently argue about causation and notice—especially when symptoms appear “later” or when multiple possible causes exist.


