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IMPORTANT INFORMATION

Asbestos History

History
For well over a century, asbestos has been utilized for many commercial purposes. Early on, it was seen as an ideal building material---thanks to the fact that it was an excellent insulator, fireproof, and relatively inexpensive. The hazards of asbestos were not initially known. During the twentieth century, some 30 million tons of asbestos was used in the construction of industrial sites, office buildings, schools, shipyards, homes, and everyday items such as ironing boards, dryers, toasters, and low-density insulation products. Beginning at the turn of the 20th century, researchers began to see a correlation between the unusually large numbers of deaths and lung problems in asbestos mining towns. MESOTHELIOMA ATTORNEYS- LAWYERS- ASBESTOS LAWYERS ATTORNEYS- CLICK NOW!!


Unfortunately, the use of asbestos continued to expand through the first half of the 20th century. It was during the Second World War that asbestos use reached its peak. Since that time, millions of American workers have been exposed to extremely harmful asbestos dust. In the 1930s, numerous and well-known medical journals published scientific studies that linked asbestos to cancer. Then, in 1955, scientists confirmed what they had long suspected; there was an unmistakable connection between the ingestion of asbestos fibers and the development of certain forms of lung cancer (what later came to be known as mesothelioma). The incidence of what we now refer to as mesothelioma was particularly high among shipyard workers, asbestos mine and mill workers, producers of asbestos products, construction industry workers, and other tradesmen. MESOTHELIOMA ATTORNEYS- LAWYERS- ASBESTOS LAWYERS ATTORNEYS- CLICK NOW!!


Despite the growing evidence of asbestos's health risks, manufacturers and companies continued its use for many of their projects. In all likelihood, these manufacturers were at some point aware of the potential health risks but chose to ignore them. These same companies also chose not to use safer alternative materials like fiberglass that were then being developed. Unfortunately, the victims were, for the most part, working men who had no knowledge of the potential health risks they faced.MESOTHELIOMA ATTORNEYS- LAWYERS- ASBESTOS LAWYERS ATTORNEYS- CLICK NOW!!


The government began to take a more active role in reducing the use of asbestos during the 1970s. For instance, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission placed a permanent ban on asbestos in wallboard patching compounds and gas fireplaces due to the harmful asbestos fibers they created. Other government agency regulations have significantly lowered asbestos in materials and products. In 1979, 550,000 metric tons of asbestos were produced in this country. By 1990, the annual domestic output was roughly 55,000 metric tons. MESOTHELIOMA ATTORNEYS- LAWYERS- ASBESTOS LAWYERS ATTORNEYS- CLICK NOW!!


Today, the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has strictly defined limits regarding the levels of asbestos that workers can have contact with. Those individuals who work in at risk professions are also now required to wear certain protective equipment for their long-term safety.MESOTHELIOMA ATTORNEYS- LAWYERS- ASBESTOS LAWYERS ATTORNEYS- CLICK NOW!!