Many people in the Oshkosh area used baby powder or talc-containing body products long before they ever expected to be searching for legal answers. By the time symptoms appear—or by the time a physician links a diagnosis to public reports about talc—memories fade and containers are often gone.
That’s why early fact-gathering is so important. We help clients answer questions that come up again and again in local situations, such as:
- Which brand(s) were used? (Sometimes multiple products over the years.)
- How frequently was the product applied? (Daily use vs. occasional use.)
- Who used the product? (Parents/caregivers vs. the individual with the diagnosis.)
- Where was it purchased? (Local stores, online orders, or household stock.)
For Oshkosh families, the “household record” often includes pharmacy paperwork, old receipts, photos of packaging, or even labels kept in storage. We work to turn those details into an evidence-based exposure history.


