Irmo is a suburban community where people spend time both indoors and outside—often without thinking about how smoke infiltrates buildings or how quickly indoor air quality can worsen.
In real cases, we commonly see patterns like:
- Long smoky weekends when outdoor activities continue, then symptoms worsen overnight.
- Indoor exposure through HVAC when filters were not properly maintained or air systems weren’t adjusted during peak smoke hours.
- School and childcare routines where children and caregivers are exposed repeatedly before anyone recognizes the link to smoke.
- Commute-related exposure during smoky mornings/evenings when drivers are on the road and ventilation practices vary.
Smoke can also worsen existing conditions—like asthma and COPD—so the timing of symptoms matters. In Irmo claims, the question is usually not “Was there smoke?” but whether the exposure you experienced is consistent with the injuries your doctors documented.


