In and around Emmaus, it’s common for people to piece together their story years later—especially when:
- treatment records were scattered across providers,
- names of bases or housing assignments were remembered loosely,
- symptoms appeared gradually, and
- family members are now handling documentation after a loved one is no longer able.
When the timeline isn’t perfectly neat, the case still may be viable. The key is building a defensible record: where exposure likely occurred, what illnesses were diagnosed, and how doctors can connect those diagnoses to the exposure period.


