Product-injury cases can feel straightforward at first—“I used a product; then I got sick.” But in practice, the hardest part is often establishing the bridge between exposure and injury.
For Orinda families, that bridge is frequently tested by real-world constraints:
- Medical care comes first, which can delay record collection and product identification.
- Households change—containers get tossed, labels fade, and multiple caregivers may have used the product over time.
- California timelines apply, and deadlines for filing or preserving evidence can affect what options remain.
The sooner you talk to counsel after a diagnosis or a strong medical recommendation, the better positioned you are to preserve what you can—before memories and documents become harder to obtain.


