In the Reading/Cincinnati region, cases often start the same way: a diagnosis arrives, families search for answers, and then the hard part begins—matching medical information to specific product exposure.
Instead of relying on headlines alone, your attorney focuses on three locally important building blocks:
- Product identification: what exact brand(s) and type(s) of talc-containing product were used (baby powder, body powder, cosmetic powders, and similar items).
- Timeline of exposure: how long the product was used and how it was applied in real life (for example, whether it was used for children, for friction areas, or repeatedly over time).
- Medical documentation: records that connect your diagnosis and treatment history to the alleged exposure.
This approach matters because Ohio courts expect claims to be supported by evidence—not just concern or suspicion.


