Many product-injury claims start the same way: a diagnosis, followed by questions about whether talc-containing products played a role. In West Mifflin households, that often includes:
- Long-term use of baby powder for children
- Use of talc-containing products for moisture and friction control
- Switching brands over the years, which can complicate identifying packaging and labels
The focus isn’t only on whether a product was used—it’s whether the product was allegedly defective or unreasonably dangerous for its intended and foreseeable uses. Your legal team typically evaluates how the product was made, labeled, and marketed, and whether the warnings were adequate when risks became better understood.


