Many people first notice a problem after a diagnosis spreads across multiple years—through worsening symptoms, added treatments, or new findings in medical records. That can make it harder to explain the “why” in a claim, particularly when exposure details are old and documents are scattered.
A lawyer’s job is to turn those pieces into a clear, evidence-based story: where exposure occurred, what medical conditions followed, and how the timeline supports causation. You shouldn’t have to learn federal claim standards while also managing appointments, insurance, and everyday life.


