Many Lyndon families use baby powder and similar products for practical reasons—moisture control, friction relief, or long-standing habits for infants and caregivers. Unlike high-profile “one-time exposure” cases, product exposure histories are often spread across years, homes, and caregivers.
That matters because your claim may depend on details like:
- the brands and product types used in your household
- how often talc-containing products were applied
- whether you can identify labels, packaging, or purchase timeframe
- medical records that clearly connect diagnosis and treatment to the timeline
Your lawyer’s job is to turn those scattered details into a coherent story that defense teams can’t dismiss as “too vague.”


