Many talc-related cases begin the same way: a family has used baby powder or talc-based personal care products for years—sometimes without keeping containers, receipts, or exact purchase dates.
In a community like Lima, exposure history is often reconstructed through real-life details, such as:
- What was kept in the home for routine use (including for children and older relatives)
- Which stores or pharmacies were common for refills
- Whether the product was used intermittently (for friction/moisture) or more consistently
- What packaging information remains (including lot numbers, if you have them)
When you’re trying to recover while building a case, it helps to have counsel who knows how to organize this kind of information into a timeline that makes sense to medical and legal reviewers.


