In our region, many people are exposed in ordinary, long-term ways: baby powder used during early childhood years, personal-care products applied for moisture and friction, or cosmetic items used repeatedly over time.
Local claimants often run into the same practical obstacles:
- Product labels are missing after years of use.
- Families share memories but can’t always match dates to specific brands.
- Medical records are spread across providers, especially when care spans multiple clinics or specialties.
- Costs add up quickly, including follow-up testing, prescriptions, travel, and time away from work.
A lawyer’s job is to help you build the “story” that courts require—one that connects the product you used, the timeframe of exposure, and the medical diagnosis you received.


