In and around Ozark, herbicide exposure often follows familiar routines:
- Home and property maintenance: spraying weed killer for driveways, fences, pasture edges, and garden borders.
- Nearby application: mowing or yard work after treatment, or noticing spray drift on windier days.
- Work-related exposure: landscaping, groundskeeping, farming operations, or facility maintenance where vegetation is managed on a schedule.
- Take-home residue: contaminated work clothes, boots, gloves, or tools that end up in a garage or laundry area.
When a diagnosis changes your life, the questions quickly turn to logistics—how you link the illness to the kind of exposure that actually happened, who may be responsible, and how to protect your claim while medical records are being created.


