In Oklahoma, families often treat “new diagnosis” as something to manage—until they learn about historical contamination reports and realize their timelines may match affected periods. For many, the connection isn’t obvious at first. Symptoms can begin subtly and evolve, and medical records may not immediately explain causation in a way that’s useful for a claim.
When you’re living in the real world—working shifts, caring for kids or parents, and traveling for specialists—waiting to act can create avoidable problems. Evidence collection, documentation requests, and claim preparation all take time.


