Local cases often hinge on details that are easier to lose track of over time—especially when products were used at home for years while families moved between routines, caregivers, and households.
In many Villa Park matters, the most important proof tends to fall into three buckets:
- Product identification: Which talc-containing product(s) were used (brand, type, and approximate time period). Even if you don’t have the original container anymore, label photos, old receipts, and packaging descriptions can still matter.
- Exposure timeline: How long and how often the product was used, including whether it was applied directly to skin, used for infants, or used repeatedly as part of grooming routines.
- Medical records that match the diagnosis: Treatment history, pathology/testing information, and documentation that can support a medical connection to the alleged risk.
Because talc-related claims often involve disputes about what was actually used and when, evidence organization is critical.


