In a community like Fort Dodge, exposure often isn’t limited to one scenario. People commonly report a connection to:
- Yard and property maintenance (spraying, mowing treated areas soon after application, or handling trimmers/blowers)
- Worksite or shift schedules tied to groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or agricultural support
- Secondhand exposure—for example, when someone else applied herbicides and work clothes or boots were stored or laundered at home
- Seasonal routines that make it easier to remember “when it was happening” (spring/summer application windows)
After a serious diagnosis, the hardest part is often not knowing what to do first. Legal evaluation can begin with the basics—your exposure timeline and your medical records—then build outward from there.


