In practice, “glyphosate exposure” is not a single fact—it’s a chain of circumstances. For many people in Evansville, the most relevant details are:
- How often herbicides were used (seasonal only vs. repeated applications)
- Where exposure happened (home yards, rental properties, workplaces, or property boundaries)
- Whether residue could have been carried indoors (especially with work attire)
- What products were involved (brand/product name matters more than general “weed killer”)
Because exposure often occurs gradually, the connection may only become clear after a diagnosis. That timing is common—and it’s one reason evidence collection shouldn’t wait.


