In West Virginia, the strongest cases usually start with a clean, defensible timeline—because real life isn’t a lab. For many Fairmont residents, product use happened across years at home, during childcare, or through routine grooming habits. When a diagnosis follows later, details can blur.
Your attorney will typically help you reconstruct:
- Which product(s) you used (brand, type, and whether it was baby powder, body powder, or a cosmetic item)
- How often it was used and for how long
- Whether the product was used at home, around infants, or in other household routines
- Any changes in symptoms, treatment, or diagnoses that occurred over time
That local, fact-based timeline approach is important for Fairmont residents because families often rely on memory, older containers, or partial packaging—so early organization can make the difference between “possible” and “provable.”


