Many clients first contact counsel after a diagnosis, but the story often begins elsewhere—at home, in a caregiver routine, or with personal care products used for years.
In the Tacoma area, it’s common to see:
- Long-term household use of baby powder or personal care powders for friction control and moisture.
- Caregiving situations where family members remember product brands only after medical news arrives.
- Multiple product switches over time, especially when brands change packaging or retailers change inventory.
- Delayed notice—people notice warnings or public reporting only after symptoms develop or a doctor recommends further testing.
Because exposure timelines can span years, your legal strategy needs to be built around what’s provable—not what’s guessed.


