In a community like New Albany, many people used talc-containing products for years as part of personal care—sometimes starting in childhood and continuing into adulthood. That long timeline can create two problems at once:
- Product memory fades. Brands, approximate purchase years, and where items were bought can become unclear.
- Medical documentation matters more. Ohio courts expect claims to be supported by records and credible evidence, not assumptions.
When you combine long-term personal care habits with a later diagnosis, the case often turns on whether the right product details and medical records can be aligned in a way that makes sense to attorneys, experts, and insurers.


