After a diagnosis, many people delay paperwork because they’re focused on treatment. In product-injury cases, that delay can hurt your ability to connect your timeline of exposure to what doctors documented.
Start by collecting:
- Pathology and imaging reports (not just summaries)
- Doctor notes that mention suspected causes, risk factors, or exposure history
- Treatment records and billing documentation
- Any records showing when you started using talc-containing products and for how long
If you’re already dealing with oncology appointments, wound care, or long-term follow-ups, ask your providers how to obtain records efficiently. In Virginia, you generally have options to request medical records, but the process is easier when you know what to ask for.


