Many clients come forward after a diagnosis, but the exposure story often has a familiar pattern in Acadiana:
- Home and yard treatment: frequent weed control, spot-spraying along fences and driveways, or routine maintenance of landscaped areas.
- Work near treated vegetation: grounds crews, landscaping teams, facility maintenance, and workers responsible for keeping access areas clear.
- Residue on clothing or gear: herbicide carried on work boots, gloves, or equipment and then brought into shared spaces.
- Secondhand exposure during community upkeep: being present while spraying occurs nearby—such as around multi-unit housing, schools, or public-facing properties.
Because these situations are common, the key question becomes not just “was glyphosate involved?” but how the exposure likely happened and when it happened in relation to symptoms and diagnosis.


