When symptoms start after something at home or work, the first priority is medical care. The second is documentation—because in West Virginia, your ability to prove what you were exposed to (and when) can heavily influence what happens next.
Do these steps promptly:
- Tell your clinician about timing and location: whether symptoms began after a specific jobsite, renovation, cleaning product use, or a period of strong odors.
- Request copies of medical records (not just summaries) and keep a symptom log.
- Preserve exposure evidence: photos of visible mold/moisture, ventilation problems, staining, damaged materials, or any spills.
- Save product and jobsite information: labels, safety sheets (SDS), receipts, contractor names, and any written warnings.
- Write down who knew what and when: property managers, employers, contractors, or facility contacts.
If you’re unsure what matters legally, a Vienna hazardous exposure attorney can help you organize the facts before they get lost.


