Fulshear households often rely on long-term personal care products—items bought years apart, used consistently, and stored in cabinets or nurseries. That lifestyle can make evidence harder to assemble later.
Common local scenarios we see include:
- No original packaging after moving homes or reorganizing closets (common during Texas growth and relocations)
- Multiple product brands used over time as families switch stores or refill routines
- Caregiver memory gaps when exposure started before a diagnosis or when a diagnosis affects a parent or child
The key is not whether you have the container today—it’s whether you can still reconstruct a reliable exposure history. Your lawyer can help you build that record from what you do have: receipts, photos, label remnants, and medical timelines.


