San Elizario’s routine life often includes predictable exposure patterns:
- Morning and evening commutes where visibility drops and air quality worsens for stretches of time.
- Outdoor activities for families and workers before indoor air can be properly stabilized.
- Frequent stops and errands that lengthen time in smoky conditions.
- School and workplace schedules that can delay medical evaluation until symptoms become hard to ignore.
Those patterns matter legally because claims are strongest when your timeline is specific—what days were smoky, how long you were outside or in a vehicle, when symptoms began, and how your condition changed after treatment.


