In this area, exposure often shows up through everyday routines:
- Lawn and landscaping work around homes, HOAs, and rental properties—especially when herbicide is applied in warm months.
- Secondhand exposure from vehicles, trailers, and outdoor equipment—residue can transfer to interiors during commuting and errands.
- Worksite exposure for people employed in groundskeeping, landscaping, facilities, or maintenance where vegetation control is routine.
- Post-spray contact—mowing, trimming, or walking near areas that were recently treated can increase contact with dried residue.
Many clients tell us the same thing: they didn’t connect the dots until a diagnosis, a pathology report, or a doctor raised the possibility of an environmental link. When that happens, the next step is to build a clear record of where exposure may have happened, what products were used, and how the medical evidence fits.


