In the Albany area, exposure stories commonly connect to everyday routines—property care, landscaping, and agricultural or maintenance work in the region.
Many clients describe one or more of these patterns:
- Seasonal property maintenance: using weed killers on driveways, sidewalks, and yard edges during spring and summer, including repeated spot treatment.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping: working for a contractor, facility, municipality, or commercial property where herbicides were applied and workers later handled equipment or wore contaminated clothing.
- Neighborhood proximity: living near areas where vegetation is routinely treated—then noticing symptoms later and trying to connect the timeline.
- Family “take-home” exposure: a household member bringing residue home on work boots, jackets, gloves, or tools.
A diagnosis can make the past feel suddenly urgent. In Albany, that urgency often collides with the practical need to gather records while keeping up with appointments, work, and caregiving.


