Many people in the Ridgeland area don’t think of “herbicide exposure” until they hear a diagnosis story that sounds similar to their own. Then they remember details like:
- Yard and fence-line treatments done seasonally (often more than once per year)
- Landscaping or groundskeeping work where spraying or trimming happened on tight schedules
- Residue carried on work boots, gloves, or clothing brought into garages and homes
- Continued exposure after application—mowing, pulling weeds, or maintaining treated areas
- Secondhand contact when neighbors or property contractors treated nearby lots
In practice, these situations tend to create the question that drives a claim: what exposure happened, when it happened, and how it ties to the medical diagnosis.


