Hi and welcome.

The whole egg laying process is sooo nerve wracking, but our sweet ladies know what to do. When I know the time is close, I hang a light sheet over the lower half of the enclosure so she’ll have privacy. If she isn’t in her basking area, I’ll listen carefully for a few minutes before looking. If I hear the soft sounds of digging, I know to just let her do her thing. I don’t worry about feeding her and I have a misting system. If I didn’t have a mist system, I’d use a dripper (not over the lay bin though) for a little time. I do have small peek holes in my sheet so I can monitor without disturbing her. Some ladies will dig a few test holes before settling on one. She may sleep in her tunnel or return to her branches. You’ll know she’s done when she is basking, looks thinner and she has fully covered all signs that there were ever any holes dug. The whole process can take a couple of days. Feed and hydrate her very well for a couple of days. Hornworms and silkworms are perfect at this time. Then you want to start her on a diet of 3-4 feeders, 3 days a week and keep her basking temp no higher than 80. This regimen will help reduce the number of eggs she produces and even the frequency of laying. In some, it stops laying completely. The more eggs produced increases risks for complications like egg binding. Frequent laying takes so very much out of our ladies that it shortens their lives.
You will need to be alert for signs that she is having problems. Not basking, staying low in her enclosure, lethargy, eyes closed during the day, dropping eggs randomly, any blood from anywhere, stopping digging with no eggs laid and just go with your gut feeling. The quicker you get her to a good vet, the stronger she is and has better chances to recover.
I’m in Brevard county and go to Dr Bogoslavsky in Orlando.
https://myavho.com/ He is excellent and very experienced with chameleons. However, if your girl needs surgery, he no longer performs them and would refer you to
https://www.orlandoexoticveterinarian.com/ I’ve heard excellent things about them and took one of my sick girls there. She was at the end of having a cancer and they euthanized her when it was time. They will insist that you need to soak your chameleon in a closed bin of warm water sitting on a heating pad. Everything about that is sooo wrong, but no where is perfect. (Just don’t soak your cham!) I know Orlando would be quite a distance, but often for good vets with chameleon experience we do need to travel. I hope I’ve been of some help.