People usually reach out after one of these situations:
- Residential lawn treatment: Herbicide applications on nearby properties, HOA-managed landscaping, or frequent yard spraying that coincides with years of symptoms.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping work: Employees who mix/apply herbicides, clean equipment, or handle freshly treated vegetation.
- Secondhand exposure: Family members who were around treated work clothes, boots, or tools.
- Shared maintenance areas: Common areas in apartment complexes or condo communities where spraying schedules aren’t always communicated to residents.
In these cases, the key question isn’t whether glyphosate is “in the conversation.” The key question is whether the facts of your Pompano Beach exposure line up with the product and timeframe your doctors are referencing.


