In East Bethel and throughout the Twin Cities area, many people rely on electronic portals, primary care networks, and follow-up specialists. That’s helpful for treatment—but it can make evidence harder to assemble later if you don’t gather it in a usable way.
After a potential Camp Lejeune exposure, consider collecting:
- Copies of diagnoses, lab results, imaging reports, and treatment summaries
- Any documentation showing where you lived/served during the relevant time periods
- A written symptom timeline (when symptoms began, progressed, and what changed medically)
- Records of medications and ongoing care (especially where long-term management is involved)
A lawyer can help you organize this information so it’s consistent and persuasive—not just “available.”


