Many hazardous exposure claims fail to move forward quickly because the story stays vague—“I felt unwell” without a defensible exposure timeline. In Selma, that timeline can be complicated by:
- Commute and shift changes that line up with symptom flare-ups
- Residential and property maintenance issues (mold remediation, ventilation changes, pest-control chemicals)
- Construction activity that increases dust, fumes, or chemical use near homes or job sites
- Workplace turnover and changing assignments that make it harder to pin down what happened and when
A smart early step is to capture dates and patterns: when symptoms began, what tasks or locations preceded them, and whether symptoms improved on days off or after specific environmental changes. AI-enabled case review can help your legal team spot inconsistencies and identify what records are missing—without you having to re-explain everything from scratch.


