In and around Bettendorf, many people come to our office with exposure patterns tied to everyday life—yard work, neighborhood maintenance, and the kind of commuting-and-community routines that make it easy to overlook residue exposure.
Some of the most common scenarios include:
- Residential lawn or garden use: applying weed killer at home, mowing treated areas shortly afterward, or cleaning up sprayer equipment without proper protective steps.
- Working outdoors: groundskeeping, landscaping, agriculture-related work, or maintaining properties along roads and right-of-way areas.
- “Secondhand” contact: residue carried on work boots, clothing, gloves, or tools that household members later handle.
- Community proximity: living near properties where herbicides are applied, including areas maintained by contractors.
If you’re wondering whether your situation “counts,” the question usually isn’t whether you were around herbicides—it’s whether there’s enough support to link a specific exposure history to a specific medical condition.


