After a noticeable smoke episode, the biggest mistake is waiting until symptoms “settle down” before you document what happened. In Morgan City, that documentation matters because claims often depend on timing—especially when you were commuting, working outdoors, or spending evenings at local events.
Do these things right away (or as soon as you can):
- Track your timeline in plain language: when smoke started, when it felt worse, where you were (home, worksite, school drop-off, outdoor recreation), and when symptoms began.
- Record indoor conditions: note whether HVAC was running, whether air filters were changed, and whether windows/doors were kept closed.
- Save proof of exposure: screenshots of local air quality alerts, pharmacy records, discharge paperwork, and any wearable/device logs that show symptom onset.
- Get medical attention when symptoms escalate: urgent care or emergency evaluation should be documented—especially if you had breathing distress, required breathing treatments, or had worsening asthma/COPD.
This isn’t just “paperwork.” It’s how you preserve the factual backbone insurers and defense counsel will scrutinize later.


