In the Rockford area, herbicide exposure concerns commonly surface in a few real-world settings:
- Residential property maintenance: Homeowners and caregivers using weed control products on driveways, fence lines, vacant lots, or landscaped areas—then noticing symptoms months or years later.
- Landscaping and grounds work: Workers applying herbicides as part of routine groundskeeping for schools, apartment complexes, commercial properties, or public-facing facilities.
- Secondhand exposure: Family members encountering residue brought home on work gloves, boots, jackets, or tools.
- Seasonal patterns: Many people trace possible exposure to a specific period—spring application, late-summer re-treatment, or repeated mowing/trimming after spraying.
If your medical team has discussed a condition that may be linked to glyphosate exposure, the key question becomes: what evidence ties your illness to the way and timing herbicides were used where you lived or worked?


