A common pattern we see with Camp Lejeune cases is delayed discovery. Someone may have lived or served at a relevant time, and later—sometimes years later—develop symptoms that eventually lead to serious diagnoses. By the time the connection is made, the hardest parts can feel logistical:
- Collecting older service or residence documentation
- Finding lab work, imaging, and treatment records
- Explaining how exposure fits the medical timeline
- Responding to requests for information without accidentally leaving gaps
When you’re in Versailles, those tasks can be harder to manage around work schedules, family needs, and travel to appointments across Fayette, Woodford, and surrounding counties.


