Many Westwood residents first connect the dots after a biopsy, cancer diagnosis, or another serious condition leads to new information about talc exposure. In practice, the issue often isn’t whether you purchased a product—it’s whether the product’s risks were handled responsibly across the supply chain.
New Jersey courts generally require plaintiffs to build a credible, documented story tying together:
- Which talc-containing products were used (brand, type, approximate timeframe)
- How and how often they were used in the household or personal-care routines
- What medical findings support the diagnosis and treatment history
Your attorney’s job is to translate that story into evidence that can withstand scrutiny—especially when a defense team argues that other factors better explain the condition.


