In communities like South Charleston, many families rely on everyday personal care products at home—items used for years for comfort, hygiene, and routines. When symptoms later lead to a serious condition, people often run into the same practical problems:
- The product is no longer in the house (packaging discarded, labels worn off, containers replaced).
- Exposure happened across multiple locations—childhood homes, relatives’ houses, or earlier workplaces.
- Medical timelines don’t “match” the way people expect, which creates uncertainty about whether a claim is viable.
Our experience handling product injury matters in West Virginia shows that the strongest cases usually start with a clear story: what was used, when, and how the medical condition was documented.


