Many residents used talc-containing products for routine personal care—at home, while caring for children, or as part of a long-standing grooming habit. Over time, containers get tossed, labels fade, and details blur.
That’s a problem for product injury cases because the strongest claims depend on a clear exposure timeline and accurate product identification. In suburban areas like Cornelius, it’s common for:
- Products to be purchased through big-box retailers or local pharmacies and later replaced without keeping packaging
- Multiple caregivers to use different personal care items in the same household
- Medical records to be spread across providers, imaging centers, and specialists
When the record isn’t organized early, it becomes harder to connect the medical history to the product history.


