In Amsterdam, many exposures come to light after the fact—sometimes because symptoms show up later, sometimes because documentation is scattered across employers, property managers, contractors, or insurers. If you’re trying to connect the dots, the most important early task is building a credible timeline:
- When exposure likely began (specific dates, shifts, locations, or events)
- When symptoms started and how they changed
- What you reported and to whom (supervisors, landlords, maintenance staff, safety personnel)
- What was tested (air/water/mold sampling, product or chemical logs)
- What was done afterward (remediation attempts, repairs, ventilation changes)
New York courts expect evidence to line up. When it doesn’t, opposing parties may argue there’s no causal connection. A local toxic exposure lawyer can help you organize the facts so they match the medical record—not the other way around.


