Many residents used powder products in homes where multiple caregivers, family members, or household routines were involved—especially when caring for children, aging parents, or helping with childcare. In practice, that often means the original container is long gone, labels are unreadable, and the timeline becomes fragmented.
That’s a major reason to act early. In Lewisville (and across North Carolina), the most persuasive talc cases usually require:
- identifying the specific product(s) used, even if you no longer have the packaging
- building a credible timeline of exposure (how long, how often, and during what life stage)
- connecting exposure to the medical diagnosis and treatment path through records
When those details are missing, defense teams may argue the illness came from other sources—or that the product at issue wasn’t actually the one used.


