Toxic exposure doesn’t always come from a dramatic event that everyone witnesses. In Ammon, it can also be tied to routine settings where people spend time—like:
- Construction, remodeling, and demolition: dust, insulation materials, sealants, solvents, and other substances brought into homes or workplaces.
- Trades and industrial work: chemical handling, poor ventilation, inadequate respiratory protection, and safety plan failures.
- Residential plumbing and water systems: contamination concerns, treatment failures, or delayed responses to water quality reports.
- Mold after moisture intrusion: often discovered only after odors, visible growth, or ongoing respiratory irritation.
- Events and public-serving settings: cleaning products, disinfectants, or ventilation shortcomings that affect employees and visitors.
If your symptoms are consistent with exposure but the cause is being disputed, the question becomes less “what happened?” and more “what can be proven—and by when?”


