Before you speak with an attorney, it helps to collect the details that are often hardest to reconstruct later—especially for residents who may have relied on household products bought years apart.
- Product identification: brand name, product type (baby powder, cosmetic talc, etc.), and any photos of the container or label.
- Your exposure timeline: approximate start date, years of use, and how the product was applied (on skin directly, on clothing, on infants, etc.).
- Medical records: diagnosis date, pathology/testing results if applicable, and a list of providers who treated you.
- Household documentation: old receipts (if available), pharmacy or store records, and packaging you still have.
This isn’t about “proving everything” yourself. It’s about giving your lawyer the raw material needed to verify the right product history and connect it to your medical timeline.


