Many talc exposure concerns in central South Carolina start in everyday routines—baby care, personal grooming, and moisture/friction control. In practice, Sumter clients frequently describe:
- Using baby powder or talc-based products for years in household caregiving
- Switching brands over time without saving containers, labels, or receipts
- Remembering approximate purchase periods rather than exact dates
- Learning about potential talc links only after a cancer or other serious diagnosis
Because these details can be scattered across memory, old packaging, and family conversations, the early challenge isn’t “proving harm”—it’s building a clear record of what was used, when, and how.


