Many people in the Philadelphia-area region don’t realize they may have a Camp Lejeune connection until years after service or residence. By then, memories fade, medical records are scattered across providers, and family members may be unsure which documents actually matter.
We often see Woodbury-area families in this situation:
- Symptoms started gradually, so the original medical records don’t clearly “link” the condition to water exposure.
- A veteran or civilian caregiver passed documents along at the time, but details are incomplete now.
- Multiple healthcare providers treated the same person, creating a fragmented timeline.
- The claimant can’t easily travel to gather records and coordinate follow-ups.
A lawyer’s job is to turn that scattered history into a coherent claim narrative—without asking you to become an expert in legal procedure.


