Clemson residents often encounter talc exposure in “ordinary life” settings—home care products, personal hygiene items, and long-term household use—rather than through industrial workplaces.
That matters because your case may hinge on documentation that families in South Carolina don’t always keep, such as:
- product boxes or labels you used to store in a bathroom cabinet
- photos of packaging (if you took any before tossing it)
- purchase history from local retailers or online orders
- a caregiver’s recollection of which products were used for children over time
And because Clemson is a community with active schedules, delays can happen. A later “we should have saved that” moment can create avoidable gaps—especially when evidence is time-sensitive.


