What are you contacting us about?
Pick the closest match. If nothing fits, that's fine — say so and a person will look at it.
Have you been diagnosed?
Nearly every one of these cases requires a diagnosis from a doctor. We ask first because if there isn't one, we'd rather tell you now than waste your afternoon.
Did the exposure come before the diagnosis?
Meaning: you used the product, or were around it, before you got sick. An approximate answer is completely fine — nobody expects you to have records.
Are you already working with a lawyer on this?
If you are, you're in good hands and you don't need us. We'd rather send you back to them than muddy things up.
Where can we reach you?
A real person reviews this and calls you back. Usually within the hour during business hours.
Thank you, —. We've got it.
Your situation matches what attorneys in the — litigation are looking for. Here's exactly what happens now — no surprises.
What happens next
- 1
Someone calls you — usually within the hour
During business hours. If you submitted overnight, expect a call in the morning. The call will come from 888-916-9925 — save it, so you know it's us and not a spam call.
- 2
A short conversation, maybe 10 minutes
They'll ask about your exposure and your diagnosis in a bit more detail. You don't need anything in front of you.
- 3
We introduce you to a law firm handling these cases
They'll explain their fee agreement in writing. Whether you hire them is entirely your call — and you're free to talk to other firms too.
Worth gathering, if you can
- Medical records or a discharge summary mentioning the diagnosis
- Rough dates — when you were exposed, when you were diagnosed
- Pharmacy records or prescription history, if it's a drug
- Employment history, if the exposure happened at work
If you don't have any of this, don't worry. Most people don't. An attorney can request records on your behalf — that's a normal part of the job. Nothing here is a requirement to talk to us.
If this involves a medication you're still taking, do not stop taking it because of anything you read here. Talk to your doctor. A legal claim and your medical care are separate decisions, and stopping a drug abruptly can be more dangerous than continuing it.
Thanks, —. A person needs to look at this one.
Your answers don't line up neatly with the standard criteria — but that happens constantly, and it doesn't mean you don't have a claim. Timing is often fuzzy, bystander exposure counts more than people expect, and family claims follow different rules.
So instead of a computer deciding, someone will actually read this and call you.
What happens next
- 1
A person reviews what you sent
Not an algorithm. Usually the same day.
- 2
They call you from 888-916-9925
Save the number so you don't mistake it for spam.
- 3
You get a straight answer
If there's nothing here, we'll tell you that plainly. We won't string you along.
We can't help with this one — yet.
Nearly every case on this site requires a confirmed diagnosis from a doctor. Without one, there's nothing an attorney can file, and it would be dishonest of us to take your details and imply otherwise.
What would actually help you right now
- 1
See a doctor about the symptoms
This matters far more than any lawsuit. Tell them what you were exposed to and when — that context genuinely changes what they look for.
- 2
Write down what you remember, now
Where you were exposed, roughly when, for how long, what product. Memory fades and this is the information that's hardest to reconstruct later.
- 3
Come back if you get a diagnosis
We'll be here. And be aware that filing deadlines usually run from the date of diagnosis — so getting one starts a clock rather than ending your options.
If you're worried enough to be here, that's worth taking to a doctor. Not because of a lawsuit — because of you.
You've already got a lawyer — stick with them.
If you've signed with a firm on this claim, they're representing you, and the most useful thing we can do is get out of the way. Bringing in another party can complicate your case, and we're not going to do that to you just to book a lead.
If you're unhappy with your current firm
That's a real thing and you do have options — you can generally change representation, though the fee arrangements between firms can get complicated. That's a conversation to have with a lawyer, not with us.
Slow updates are normal in mass tort litigation — these cases move over years, not weeks. Long silences usually mean nothing is wrong. Call your firm and ask for a status update; you're entitled to one.