Showing posts with label asbestos related cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label asbestos related cancer. Show all posts

News: Appeal over asbestos law ruling

Insurers have appealed against the decision to allow legislation which gives victims of an asbestos-related illness the right to claim damages.

Last week, a judge rejected a bid to invalidate The Damages (Asbestos-related Conditions)(Scotland) Act which came into force last year.

It allows sufferers of pleural plaques, a benign scarring of the lungs, to make compensation claims.

Aviva, AXA, RSA and Zurich believe the Scottish Parliament act is "flawed".

The law overturned a House of Lords ruling which said damages could not be claimed for the illness, which is not classed as a disease and has no symptoms.

'Good grounds'

Although pleural plaques does not cause or develop into a more serious asbestos-related condition, it does signify an increased risk of developing mesothelioma because of exposure to asbestos.

Nick Starling, director of general insurance and health with the Association of British Insurers, said: "After careful consideration and legal advice, insurers consider that there are good grounds for this appeal.

"Insurers have not taken this decision lightly, and it reflects their strong view that The Damages Act is fundamentally flawed as it ignores overwhelming medical evidence that plaques are symptomless, and the well-established legal principle that compensation is payable only when there are physical symptoms."

The ABI said the appeal would not affect insurers commitment to pay compensation to people with asbestos-related diseases, such as mesothelioma.

Source: BBC News (14/01/10)



News: Scottish asbestos law challenge rejected

A judge has rejected a bid to invalidate a Scottish Parliament law giving victims of an asbestos-related illness the right to claim damages.

Following a 22-day hearing at the Court of Session, Lord Emslie ruled against the move by UK insurance companies.

They disputed The Damages (Asbestos-related Conditions)(Scotland) Act which came into force last year.

It allows sufferers of pleural plaques, a benign scarring of the lungs, to make compensation claims.

The Holyrood law overturned a House of Lords ruling which said damages could not be claimed for the illness, which is not classed as a disease and has no symptoms.

Although pleural plaques does not cause or develop into a more serious asbestos-related condition, it does signify an increased risk of developing mesothelioma because of exposure to asbestos.

A judicial review of the act was brought by AXA General Insurance Ltd and other insurance companies.

'Differences of opinion'

The insurers said the act would benefit a small group of individuals who had suffered no harm and would impose a "disproportionate and excessive burden on insurers running into hundreds of millions, if not billions, of pounds".

Lord Emslie's written ruling concluded: "There is clearly room for differences of opinion as to whether the parliament was right to legislate in the way it did, and it remains to be seen whether the 2009 Act will prove to have adverse legal or political consequences in years to come."

But the judge said he did not accept that the insurers' complaints came anywhere near the standard of "irrationality" needed to invalidate an Act of the Scottish Parliament.

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) said they are now seriously considering the grounds for an appeal.

Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill said he welcomed the decision.

He added: "The Scottish government believes that the legislation is right in principle and right in law and has been unequivocally upheld.

"I firmly believe that people with pleural plaques should be able to raise a claim for damages and I am pleased that this decision has gone in their favour.

"I sincerely hope that the insurers will now carefully reflect on what Lord Emslie has said and abandon any plans they have to raise an appeal in the Inner House."

The ABI's Director of General Insurance and Heath, Nick Starling said: "We are pleased that the judgment recognises the fundamental right of insurers to challenge legislation made by the Scottish Parliament, although we are disappointed that the judge did not feel able to overturn the law passed by the Scottish Parliament.

"Insurers will now be considering carefully this judgment, and are seriously looking at the grounds for an appeal against it.

"This is not the end of the road."


Source: BBC News (08/01/10)


News: Fear over asbestos compensation

Victims of an asbestos-related disease may miss out on compensation, it has been claimed.

A solicitor representing dozens of people in Oxfordshire said he was worried a new bill to compensate those with pleural plaque may not become law.

The condition can be a forerunner of asbestosis and mesothelioma.

Peter Lodge said claimants would be "left in limbo" as a second reading of the bill in the House of Lords would be unlikely before the next election.

People suffering from pleural plaque lost their automatic right to compensation in 2007 following a ruling by the House of Lords.

'Nominal amount'

Pleural plaques are areas of thick scar tissue which form in the chest lining and diaphragm and are caused by asbestos exposure.

It does not have any obvious symptoms, but about 10% of people with pleural plaque develop other asbestos-related illnesses such as mesothelioma.

The Damages Bill, which would compensate those with pleural plaque, was then passed in the House of Commons in October, but is still to be debated in the House of Lords.

Mr Lodge, who represents about 70 people, said he was reasonably optimistic the law would eventually be passed by the government.

"I think it is hopeful they will introduce a new scheme whereby anyone who can show that they have pleural plaque will receive a fairly standard nominal amount."

Clive Sutton, 67, from Stonesfield near Witney, came into contact with asbestos whilst working at a manufacturing plant in the fifties and sixties.

Doctors confirmed he had developed pleural plaque after having a chest x-ray in 2005.

He said: "When the ruling took place in the House of Lords, I think that's what the Lords were working on - the fact that no-one with pleural plaque had gone on to suffer any serious injury or effects."


Source: BBC News (11/12/09)



News: A former marine machinist, Robert “Bobby” Hilt of Vallejo, California, won $7.5 million in a mesothelioma lawsuit


This article is about a mesothelioma patient that was diagnosed of asbestos related cancer in earlier 2008 and now he won $7.5 million in a mesothelioma lawsuit.

A former marine machinist, Robert “Bobby” Hilt of Vallejo, California, won $7.5 million in a mesothelioma lawsuit, which is one of the highest settlements for a patient as old as the 64-year-old Hilt in California courts’ history.

Bobby Hilt was diagnosed with mesothelioma earlier in 2008, nearly a year from his trial.

Mesothelioma is an almost always fatal cancer of the tissues lining the lungs. Currently there is no effective treatment for the disease, which is almost always caused by exposure to asbestos. In most cases, mesothelioma does not develop until decades after exposure. Scientists are not sure why this is, but they do agree that asbestos exposure does lead to the cancer. Patients typically only survive for 12 to 18 months after their diagnosis of mesothelioma.

Hilt sued 11 defendants for causing his exposure to asbestos during his work as a machinist in the 1960s through the 1970s. He claimed that the defendants either made, supplied, or distributed the asbestos-containing materials around which he worked during his career.

Hilt’s career involved a stint at the Bayshore plant for Schlage Lock Company from 1963 to 1965. After that time, he moved to work at the Hunter’s Point Naval Shipyard until 1972. During the early part of the 1970s, Hilt worked as a machinist in the nuclear reactor compartments of the Sturgeon submarines at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard. It was during this decade of working at these places that Hilt feels he inhaled asbestos fibers that led to his mesothelioma. Since after his time at the shipyards, he went to work at the U.S. Mint in San Francisco from 1972 until he retired in 2004.

The trial began early in November 2008, but two weeks into the proceedings, there were no longer any defendants still in court as the last of the eleven had chosen to settle out of court. Hilt and his wife declined to make a statement on the settlement.


Source: www.asbestos.net

News: Nov/02/2009 Thousands of residents and worker exposed to asbestos-contaminated

ScienceDaily (Nov. 2, 2009) — Over nearly a century, thousands of residents and workers in Libby, MT, have been exposed to asbestos-contaminated vermiculite ore, leading to markedly higher rates of lung disease and autoimmune disorders, and causing to Libby in 2002 to be added to the federal Environmental Protection Agency's "National Priorities List."



Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, leading a team of investigators from four institutions, are now launching three investigations into disease pathology in the town and to determine recommended cleanup efforts.

The Principal Investigator of the project is Stephen Levin, MD, Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and a nationally known expert in occupational medicine and asbestos-related diseases who has also served as PI of the nationwide World Trade Center Medical Monitoring & Treatment Program, coordinated by Mount Sinai since 2002.

"The asbestos-related disease in Libby is far more aggressive and rapidly progressive than what's seen in most asbestos-exposed workers, with high rates of cancers and severe effects on respiratory function," said Dr. Levin. "For that reason alone, the health problems in Libby are important to study and understand."

The first of the three programs will focus on particular risks of exposure to Libby asbestos during childhood, when lungs are still developing and maturing. This research may determine the level of environmental cleanup necessary in Libby to protect children, who are a particularly sensitive target population.

A second study will compare lung scarring among Libby residents who were exposed to asbestos only in their environment (and not at their place of employment) with lung scarring seen in workers with historically long-term, heavy exposure to common commercial forms of asbestos. Researchers hope to discover why Libby residents have advanced rates of lung scarring. They will also investigate the mechanism for asbestos-related scar formation and approaches to preventing scar formation after exposure has already occurred.

The third investigation will examine the relationships between autoimmune disorders, autoimmune antibody abnormalities, and CT-scan evidence of scarring lung disease in the context of exposure to Libby asbestos. Auto-immune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus have been found to occur more frequently in Libby, and antibody levels to the body's own tissues are found in Libby residents more frequently and at higher concentrations.

Mount Sinai researchers will collaborate on the research effort, to be known as the Libby Epidemiology Research Program, with Libby's Center for Asbestos Related Disease (CARD), investigators from the University of Montana and Idaho State University, and a national scientific advisory group. The research will be supported by a grant of over $4.8 million from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) of the federal Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The crisis in Libby, a mining town whose history has been shaped by vermiculite-producing corporations since the 1920s, is the result of community-wide occupational and environmental exposure to Libby's naturally occurring vermiculite, contaminated with asbestos and asbestos-like silicate fibers up to 26% by weight.

Health effects have been detected not just in mine and processing plant workers, area lumber mill workers and loggers (from asbestos dusting of forests) and their families, but also among other Libby residents and their children. Many were exposed through ambient air or to mine tailings and other contaminated materials provided to the town by mining companies for the construction of ball fields, school running tracks, playgrounds, public buildings and facilities, as well as for private gardens and house and business insulation.

There is evidence that even relatively low-level exposures to Libby asbestos can cause serious scarring lung diseases, which markedly impair respiratory function, as well as asbestos-related cancers like lung cancer and mesothelioma, which occur at higher rates among the Libby population than elsewhere in the United States.

The health crisis potentially extends far beyond the borders of Libby, since millions of homes and businesses in North America have used vermiculite from Libby as attic insulation, fireproofing and soil conditioner. The ore from Libby was shipped by rail to 49 plant locations throughout North America and the Caribbean for processing, exposing many more workers and communities to the hazardous dust.

CARD Director Brad Black, MD, said, "The pattern of asbestos disease caused by exposure to Libby amphibole asbestos has led to excessive morbidity and mortality for the Libby population, and has been exceedingly challenging for the medical community. The severity of nonmalignant pulmonary disease in non-occupational exposure has been very unusual, raising question as to the potency of the unique amphibole mixture. We look forward to working with Dr. Levin and Mount Sinai to find some of these answers."


The Mount Sinai Hospital / Mount Sinai School of Medicine (2009, November 2). Asbestos Contamination: Health Impacts Of One Of The Nation's Largest Environmental Disasters. ScienceDaily. Retrieved January 12, 2010, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2009/11/091102172255.htm

FACTS: Dr. Deborah Morosini speaks passionately about asbestos related cancer

Dr. Deborah Morosini speaks passionately about asbestos related cancer


Lung cancer claims the lives of more Americans than all other cancers combined. In this powerful clip, hear research pathologist Dr. Deborah Morosini speak about lung cancer and its causes, especially the impact of exposure to toxins like asbestos.

WATCH VIDEOS here


Source: www.baronandbudd.com

FACTS: Asbestos related cancers among 28,300 military servicemen in the Royal Norwegian Navy

Asbestos related cancers among 28,300 military servicemen in the Royal Norwegian Navy

Introduction
This study focus on the incidence of asbestos-related cancers among 28,300 officers and enlisted servicemen in the Royal Norwegian Navy. Until 1987, asbestos aboard the vessels potentially caused exposure to 11,500 crew members.

Methods
Standardized incidence ratios (SIR) were calculated for malignant mesothelioma, lung cancer, and laryngeal, pharyngeal, stomach, and colorectal cancers according to service aboard between 1950 and 1987 and in other Navy personnel.

Results
Increased risk of mesothelioma was seen among engine room crews, with SIRs of 6.23 (95% CI = 2.51-12.8) and 6.49 (95% CI = 2.11-15.1) for personnel who served less than 2 years and those with longer service, respectively. Lung cancer was nearly 20% higher than expected among both engine crews and non-engine crews. An excess of colorectal cancer bordering on statistical significance was seen among non-engine crews (SIR = 1.14; 95% CI = 0.98-1.32). Land-based personnel and personnel who served aboard after 1987 had lower lung cancer incidence than expected (SIR = 0.77; 95% CI = 0.64-0.92). No elevated risk of laryngeal, pharyngeal, or stomach cancers was seen.

Conclusion
The overall increase (65%) in mesotheliomas among military Navy servicemen was confined to marine engine crews only. The mesothelioma incidence can be taken as an indicator of the presence or absence of asbestos exposure, but it offered no consistent explanation to the variation in incidence of other asbestos-related cancers. Am. J. Ind. Med. 53:64-71, 2010. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Source: www3.interscience.wiley.com

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