Many people in the Schaumburg area don’t realize their condition may be connected to Camp Lejeune exposure until they’re far into treatment—sometimes after specialists weigh in, imaging results come back, or a new diagnosis is added.
When that happens, families often run into the same obstacles:
- Medical paperwork is scattered across providers and years
- Early records don’t use the same terminology as later diagnoses
- Important details (dates, locations, assignments, household information) get remembered inaccurately over time
- Questions arise about whether the illness could be explained by other factors
A lawyer can help you stitch those records together into a consistent legal narrative, so your claim is easier for decision-makers to evaluate.


