Many people in Westfield begin their case after a doctor confirms a condition and the patient (or family) looks back through years of yard care, work activities, and home maintenance habits.
Early on, the most useful information tends to fall into three buckets:
- How exposure likely occurred in your routine: lawn spraying, weeding/mowing after treatment, household use, or help from a contractor.
- When it happened: approximate dates matter more than perfection—think seasons, years, and the period leading up to diagnosis.
- What you used (or what was used nearby): product names, label photos, purchase receipts, and whether any concentrate was handled.
If you can’t remember exact dates, don’t guess—write what you know, what you suspect, and what can be verified. That distinction helps an attorney build a credible exposure story.


