Many people in SLO start with urgent medical needs—then try to reconstruct years of product use. The problem is that evidence fades faster than people expect, especially when the product was used in a household setting.
Here’s a local-first approach that tends to work:
- Confirm the diagnosis and treatment plan with your medical team.
- Collect product details while they’re still fresh: brand names, approximate purchase years, where you bought the product (local stores, online orders, baby supply runs), and any photos of containers or labels.
- Request and organize records—doctor notes, pathology reports (if applicable), imaging reports, and treatment summaries.
- Document exposure patterns: who used the product, how often it was applied, and whether it was used on infants, for body care, or for friction/moisture.
- Get legal guidance early so your evidence is preserved and your claim is built in the right order.
If you’re wondering, “Can I still do something if I don’t have the original box?”—in many cases, yes. Courts and attorneys often rely on a combination of medical documentation and credible reconstruction of product identity and timeline.


