Before you think about legal steps, take the same practical approach you’d take with any urgent medical concern:
- Follow your clinician’s testing and treatment plan (and keep records of visits, imaging, pathology, and prescriptions).
- Document the product history as soon as you can—brand name, approximate years of use, where the product was purchased, and what you used it for (baby care, friction control, underarm use, etc.).
- Save what you still have: containers, labels, receipts, photos of packaging, and even old storage locations.
In cases involving talc exposure concerns, the most frustrating problem for families is missing details—especially when the product was used long ago. Acting early helps preserve the kind of timeline your attorney will need.


