2009年11月25日星期三

Financial Assistance and Medical Benefits Available To Libby Mesothelioma Patients

Libby, MT—For those Libby residents who have been diagnosed with mesothelioma or other asbestos-related disease, federally funded medical care will be available.

The program of medical services will be funded by a $6 million grant from the Department of Health and Human Services, which was issued to the Lincoln County Health Department and a consortium. They will help provide care for those residents of the area who have contracted an asbestos-related disease from the now-defunct vermiculite mine owned and operated by W.R. Grace and Co.

Screening begins next week for the program. In order to be eligible for CDC-funded screening for the problem, you must have lived or worked in the Libby area for a minimum of six (non-consecutive) months prior to 2015. Additionally, a minimum of 10 years must have passed since your first potential exposure to asbestos, as the diseases associated with this mineral generally take over 10 years, and sometimes up to 50 years, to be accurately diagnosed because they have a very long latency, or delay, period.

Mesothelioma, a rare cancer which is nearly always linked directly to asbestos exposure, targets a particular membrane that surrounds the lungs and lines the chest cavity. Because of its long latency period, most patients are not diagnosed until they are elderly, when the disease is already greatly advanced. For this reason, mesothelioma is usually not very responsive to treatment, and palliative care to ease a patient's pain and help keep them comfortable is the best that can be anticipated.

Mesothelioma is diagnosed in over 2,000 new patients in the United States each year. Because of the mining of vermiculite in the Libby area, and the widespread use in the community of contaminated vermiculite materials, the proportion of people affected by this disease in this area is much higher.

Woman Develops Mesothelioma From Secondhand Asbestos Exposure

Seven Hills, Queensland, AUSRALIA—In another of a growing number of cases of secondhand asbestos exposure, a woman who contracted mesothelioma from washing her husband's work clothes is suing the State Government and building products manufacturer James Hardie.

The woman, whose first name is Joan and who wishes that her surname be withheld, has filed civil claim documents in the Australian Supreme Court. She is seeking $406,500 in compensation for having developed the asbestos cancer mesothelioma as a result of her husband's employment at the Bulimba power station from 1961 to 1984.

Asbestos, a substance which was once widely used for insulation and building purposes, but which has since been established as a carcinogen, can be transported as a fine particulate dust on a worker's clothing, hair and shoes. Joan said that she was in the habit of giving her husband a hug when he came home from work, and also of shaking out his overalls before laundering them. She likely inhaled the asbestos dust during these activities, and the microscopic fibers in that dust then settled into her lungs and the lining of the chest cavity known as the mesothelium.

Mesothelioma is a rare cancer, but a severe one. It may remain latent within the body for decades, or even 50 years, before it manifests itself as serious enough symptoms to require medical attention. Nevertheless, it has usually developed by this time to end stages, and may have spread throughout the body. There is little that can be done to effectively treat mesothelioma, especially at these late stages, and the average life expectancy for a mesothelioma patient is 18 months after diagnosis.

Joan, 83, is seeking damages from the State Government, for failing to provide facilities to clean her husband's clothes on site, and for failing to warn employees of the potential risks of inhaling asbestos fibers. She is also seeking damages from the James Hardie company, on similar grounds of continuing to manufacture and distribute asbestos-containing materials despite the known risks.

Joan's husband Roy, a former fitter and welder, has not been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease.

improve traditional survival rates among malignant pleural mesothelioma patients

Recently published in the medical journal Lung Cancer, a clinical trial on trimodality therapy for mesothelioma found the combination of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy (radiation) to improve traditional survival rates among malignant pleural mesothelioma patients.

The clinical trial included 35 participants with malignant pleural mesothelioma, an aggressive form of cancer that affects the lining of the lungs. Mesothelioma can also affect the lining of the abdomen (peritoneal mesothelioma), heart (pericardial mesothelioma), or testicles (testicular mesothelioma). Pleural mesothelioma is the most common form of the disease, accounting for approximately 75 percent of malignant mesothelioma cases.

All participants of the trial were treated with a radical pleurectomy surgery, which is a type of surgery that competes against the more commonplace extrapleural pneumonectomy as a surgery option for pleural mesothelioma patients. Both surgeries are cytoreductive (which aims to reduce the amount of cancer cells present in the body) and seek to remove all tumors. However, radical pleurectomy is a less invasive surgery because it removes the pleura (the lining of the lung) and not the entire lung as in an extrapleural pneumonectomy.

Following the surgery, all participants underwent four cycles of chemotherapy with Cisplatin and Permetrexed. This treatment was followed by radiation therapy approximately four to six weeks after the radical pleurectomy.

Researchers stated, "The aim of our prospective study was to analyze the feasibility and describe the long-term outcomes of patients treated with RP [radical pleurectomy] as surgical therapy modality in a standardized trimodality therapy concept." Because not all patients are healthy enough to withstand a surgery as extensive as the extrapleural pneumonectomy, a radical pleurectomy could be a better option and thus warrants further research.

The results of this study were quite promising, with overall median survival at 30 months (the average mesothelioma patient survives four to 18 months after diagnosis). One-, two- and three-year survival rates were 69 percent, 50 percent and 31 percent, respectively. These results were so positive that researchers stated, "The relative small number of patients enrolled in this study protocol limits the results of the presented study… Overall survival might be affected by further still undefined tumor biological factors and non-surgical therapy modalities. Furthermore these high survival rates could be attributed to the patient selection."

Mesothelioma studies like this one are being conducted worldwide and continue to produce promising results and new mesothelioma treatment options for patients. The results from this study showed so much potential that researchers "Believe that RP [radical pleurectomy] as a surgical strategy allows patients to capitalize on all the aspects that a multimodality treatment approach has to offer without compromising the surgical oncological result and thus we believe RP is a cornerstone of the promising long-term results achieved in our pilot study. The observed and theoretical benefits of this trimodality treatment approach warrant confirmation in larger multi-center prospective controlled studies."

Additional information on mesothelioma can be found through the Mesothelioma Center.

Mesothelioma Cancer Cures Itself

A 61-year-old Australian woman, who was exposed to asbestos as a machinist and when washing her son's work clothes while he produced asbestos gaskets, was diagnosed with mesothelioma in September, 2002. Mesothelioma is a cancer of the lining of the lungs caused by exposure to asbestos.

While waiting for chemotherapy and an experimental treatment, the cancer began to regress and the woman felt well enough pass on the treatments altogether. The doctor found that by December the cancer had decreased in size, and within two years, a CT scan showed that the mesothelioma had virtually disappeared.

Six years later, the woman remains cancer-free. While it is rare for cancer to disappear on its own, there are similar documented cases for other types of cancer.

Roger Allen, PhD, a Thoracic and Sleep Physician at Wesley Medical Centre in Brisbane, Australia suggests that patients and their doctors should view this as promising news with the potential for researchers to find ways to capture the ability of the immune system to fight off the disease and to find a cure.

Asbestos legal malpractice trial continued to February

A Madison County trial involving an asbestos plaintiff's legal malpractice claim has been continued.

Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder heard motions in the suit Friday. She ordered the trial continued until February 2010.

Crowder also took a motion for partial summary judgment filed by defendant Hopkins Goldenberg P.C. under advisement. The firm Hopkins Goldenberg no longer exists.

Attorney John Hopkins has a law practice in Edwardsville.

Attorney Mark Goldenberg is partner at Goldenberg, Heller, Antognoli & Rowland in Edwardsville.

Plaintiff Judy Buckles' legal malpractice complaint stems from a case she filed over her deceased husband's mesothelioma.

Buckles settled it for $750,000. She contends her lawyers did not secure an adequate settlement.

Buckles had sued other attorneys involved in that litigation along with the Goldenberg firm. Those defendants have since been dismissed.

Buckles' suit against her attorneys was originally filed in 2001. It was refiled three years ago.

In Hopkins Goldenberg's motion for partial summary judgment, the firm cited the testimony of Buckles' family and other evidence that she had found the settlement of her asbestos-related case satisfactory.

Buckles is represented by Roy Dripps.

Hopkins Goldenberg is represented by John Papa.

The Madison County case number 06-L-588.

Asbestos abatement technician steals copper pipe from job site

According to police officials in Dayton, Ohio, a local man who was supposed to remove asbestos from the old Dunbar High School was in fact perpetrating a scheme to defraud the school and steal valuable copper piping from the walls of the building.

James Gillispie, age 37, has now been charged with the theft of hundreds of pounds of copper from the old school. According to Dayton police, Gillispie made off with more than 200 pounds of copper from the school. In addition, he threatened his co-workers, stating that if they did not sell the scrap copper harvested from the school building, they would lose their jobs.

Removing asbestos is a very important job, as exposure to even a small amount of the deadly fibrous material is considered unsafe. Inhaling or ingesting asbestos fibers has been conclusively linked to the development of mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer. The disease typically lies dormant for up to fifty years before an individual begins to suffer from mesothelioma symptoms.

The cancer, which affects thousands of new patients worldwide each year, has no known cure. However, palliative treatment methods like chemotherapy can help some patients fend off the cancer. Sadly, most mesothelioma patients succumb to the cancer within two years of being diagnosed.

According to police, Gillispie sold the copper on multiple occasions, totaling at least nine separate incidents. It has not yet been reported if Gillispie's copper harvesting scheme exposed him or his men to asbestos that may have been in the walls or ceilings of the aging school building.

Asbestos removal in our country's schools is a hot-button issue, as it is often delayed due to lack of funding within a school district's budget. Asbestos abatement is expensive in and of itself, but the replacement of asbestos-containing materials within a school building can also be quite costly.

2009年11月24日星期二

.The American Public Health Association (APHA) recently voiced its concern on asbestos

The American Public Health Association (APHA) recently voiced its concern on asbestos and asked Congress to pass legislation that would ultimately place a complete ban on the manufacture, sale, export and import of asbestos-containing products in the United States.

Celeste Monforton, Chair of APHA's Occupational Health and Safety section, said, "With this new policy, APHA is joining the World Federation of Public Health Associations and other international organizations calling for a global ban on asbestos mining, and manufacturing, and the dangerous practice of exporting asbestos containing products."

Asbestos-related diseases such as lung cancer, asbestosis and malignant mesothelioma claim the lives of more than 10,000 Americans each year. Until a ban is placed on the use of asbestos in products, Americans will remain at risk of being exposed to the toxic mineral.

In the past, those most susceptible to asbestos exposure worked in the shipyard, construction, power plant, chemical plant or automotive industry. Once exposed, either through inhaling or ingesting asbestos fibers, the onset of symptoms can take as long as 20 years for asbestosis. For mesothelioma, symptoms may not arise until 50 years after the initial exposure occurred.

Linda Reinstein, Executive Director and Co-founder of the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization, commented on APHA's legislation stating, "APHA set a precedent with strong language aimed at preventing asbestos exposure to eliminate deadly diseases. Ambler, Pennsylvania, now a superfund site, is still plagued from asbestos piles left behind from the once profitable asbestos businesses. We can't let history repeat itself. It is time to ban asbestos and fund educational and research programs. APHA renews our optimism that a federal asbestos ban is eminent."

According to their Web site, the American Public Health Association is the oldest, largest and most diverse organization of public health professionals in the world and has been working to improve public health since 1872. The Association aims to protect all Americans and their communities from preventable, serious health threats and strives to assure community-based health promotion and disease prevention activities.

Even Forests Are Contaminated with Asbestos in Libby, Montana

Researchers at the University of Montana have detected asbestos dust on the bark of trees in the Kootenai National Forest near the closed vermiculite mine in Libby, Montana. They said Forest Service personnel performing tasks such as building fire lines and measuring trees may be exposed to airborne asbestos when doing work in the forest near the former mine.

Workplace exposure to asbestos is associated with significant increases in asbestosis, lung cancer and mesothelioma, a cancer of the lining of the lungs, compared to the general population..

The findings are relevant to people who work in the forest and people who go to the forest for recreation within about five miles of the mine, they said. Much of the land surrounding the mine is owned by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and private logging companies

Because of the widespread asbestos contaimination and high incidence of asbestos-related disease, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has declared a public health emergency in Libby, Montana and the surrounding area. Lincoln County, Montana has the third highest age-adjusted death rate of mesothelioma in the U.S.

The research was published in the Journal of Environmental and Public Health

Family Receives Compensation over Railway Worker’s Death

The family of a UK man who died from the asbestos cancer known as mesothelioma has been awarded one hundred thousand GBP. The man, Dudley Maasz, was a former railway worker who is said to have been exposed to deadly asbestos, which eventually robbed him of his life.

Maasz was seventy four years old when he died from the cancer in 2006, having been diagnosed with it back in 2005. He had worked for Great Western Railways in the 1940s according to reports. BRB, which was formerly known as British Rail, settled the claim out of court.

A lawyer for the family said: "We were able to establish that Mr Maasz death was caused by exposure to asbestos during his employment at the Oxford works. Boilers of locomotives were coated with thick asbestos and asbestos was also used over the pipes and cylinders of the engines. As a cleaner and fireman, Mr Maasz would have been exposed to this."

The victim's brother stated: "He used to sleep a lot, the pain got worse and worse and eventually he was in bed most of the time. One day I looked at him and thought - my goodness - he was half the size, he'd been eaten away, I felt so sorry for him

British Health Agency Warns Tradesmen About Asbestos

Workers in construction trades all over Scotland are the targets of a new public service crusade by the British Health and Safety Executive (HSE). The messages warn these workers to keep in mind the hazards posed by the rampant asbestos use in the country's structures built in the last sixty years. Construction workers who specialized in plumbing, joining and electrical systems were determined to be those with the highest risk factors for asbestos exposure.

According to a study conducted by the agency, doctors diagnose up to twenty new cases of mesothelioma and other asbestos-related lung disorders every week in construction workers throughout the country. The report also indicates that the number of workers who will receive such diagnoses is expected to rise for the next several years. From 1981 to 2005, more than twenty-six hundred Scottish construction workers have died from mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer that affects the fluid lining the lungs.

In recent years, scientists have determined a direct link between long-term exposure to asbestos fibers and the incidence of mesothelioma. Once the cancer appears in a patient, the prognosis is that the patient will survive for no more than two years. Most mesothelioma patients live on for less than eighteen months after diagnosis. With an average of more than a hundred deaths per year in Scotland, as well as the rising mesothelioma incidence rates, HSE officials are treating the widespread use of asbestos and the complications that come with exposure to the dangerous substance as a national health crisis.

One of the participants in the media campaign is John Greig, a former railway worker in Glasgow who was diagnosed with mesothelioma last year. In the 1950s and 1960s, Mr. Greig worked on railroad yards where he tore out sheets of asbestos by hand. He inhaled asbestos fibers routinely throughout the years, with loose fibers clinging to his skin and clothing.

In those times, medical science was unaware of the hazards posed by the toxic material, nor did the technology exist to provide workers with protective clothing and breathing filters. Now, Mr. Greig reports, he can walk no more than a hundred yards without tiring out and he cannot fly on an airplane due to his breathing problems. In his messages, he urges Scottish workers, "don't be macho" and believe that they can work with asbestos without the proper protective equipment.

Although the British government banned the use of asbestos in construction in 2000, as many as five hundred thousand non-residential structures still carry some form of asbestos. HSE officials warn that any building constructed or renovated before 2000 could contain asbestos and pose a serious health risk to work crews. According to Greg Haywood, an HSE representative with the Edinburgh office, asbestos exposure is the "biggest industrial killer" in the country. The object of this public information campaign is to make these workers aware of the risks and, if they suspect that a building where they work may contain asbestos, to take steps to check on the presence of the contaminant before continuing the job.

Sources: BBC, Google Hosted News

Mesothelioma Foundations and Charities

Mesothelioma is a rare form of cancer caused by exposure to airborne asbestos fibers. Also referred to as asbestos cancer, the World Health Organization estimates that 90,000 people world-wide die every year from mesothelioma and asbestos-related lung cancers. In addition, approximately 3,000 people are diagnosed with the deadly disease in the United States each year.

Mesothelioma is highly aggressive and is resistant to many of the current cancer treatments. While there is no known cure for mesothelioma, new research and an increased knowledge among medical professionals has increased the survival time and improved the quality of life for many patients.

Often referred to as an orphan disease when comparing the amount of research and development dedicated to developing new treatments for mesothelioma to other cancers and diseases, there are still many physicians, charities and foundations that are dedicated to finding a cure for mesothelioma. Their research requires significant amounts of time and money, and without appropriate funding, their efforts would not be possible.

The benefits that these organizations provide to patients, families, and caregivers are great. If you are looking for a resource for information pertaining to mesothelioma these organizations are established and many have been recognized for their support and dedication to the field of research and medicine.

Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF)
"The Meso Foundation is the national organization dedicated to eradicating mesothelioma as a life-ending disease" through funding the highest quality and most promising research projects, helping patients connect with national mesothelioma experts, and advocating in Washington D.C. for federal mesothelioma research funding.

The work of the Foundation is funded by mesothelioma patients and their families, law firms, drug companies, and companies formerly involved with asbestos.

The Mesothelioma Research Foundation of America (MESORFA)
The Mesothelioma Research Foundation of America's mission is simply to "fund research that will lead to the quickest cure for mesothelioma." MESORFA funds the Mesothelioma Laboratory under the supervision of Dr. Gill at the USC/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles.

MESORFA has a goal of making mesothelioma a disease of the past and they continue to educate the public and companies on the risks of asbestos.

Pacific Heart, Lung & Blood Institute (PHLBI)
PHLBI is a non-profit institution focused on the treatment and prevention of malignant pleural mesothelioma. Through their partnership with Dr. Robert Cameron, Director, Thoracic Oncology, Department of Surgery, UCLA Medical Center, PHLBI offers information designed to provide a place for patients and families to research the topic of mesothelioma.

Pacific Heart, Lung & Blood Institute (PHLBI) supports the research efforts of Dr. Cameron and the Punch Worthington Lab at UCLA.

Lung Cancer Alliance
"Lung Cancer Alliance is the only national non-profit organization dedicated solely to providing patient support and advocacy for people living with or at risk for the disease." Their services and advocacy programs include direct communication with federal and state policy leaders for gaining greater resources for lung cancer research, support of fundraisers, lung cancer clinical trials matching service, public education and campaigns, among other activities.

Support and donations to Lung Cancer Alliance provides them with the ability to maintain their unique programs for patients, elevate public awareness about lung cancer and mesothelioma, and advocate change health policy.

The National Mesothelioma Foundation (NMF)
The National Mesothelioma Foundation is a non-profit organization with a mission to help patients and their families seeking evaluation and treatment at The M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. NMF provides services including assistance with travel and lodging arrangements, providing documentation and information regarding mesothelioma, as well as emotional and spiritual support.

The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center is among the top ranked cancer treatment centers in the United States. The cancer center has over 30 specialists on staff that supports the treatment of mesothelioma patients.

Mesothelioma Victim’s Son Files Suit Against DuPont

Old Hickory, TN—In one of an increasing number of lawsuits against the company, a Tennessee man has filed a wrongful death suit against DuPont, claiming that exposure to asbestos fibers led to the mesothelioma which killed his mother.

Ruby Neely, who died earlier this year from the asbestos cancer, was exposed indirectly, via the asbestos fibers that her husband, Lively, brought home from his job on his work clothes. Asbestos, a fibrous mineral which was once highly prized for its resistance to heat and fire, can disintegrate into a microscopic dust or particulate, and can therefore cling to fabrics such as clothing or shoes. In this manner it can be transported from one location to another, and poses a health hazard not only to those who encounter it on the job, but also to their loved ones.

Lively Neely worked at the Old Hickory DuPont plant for 20 years. His job caused him to come into regular contact with asbestos insulation and other asbestos-containing materials, and as a result hi contracted an asbestos-related disease as well. Neely reached a settlement with DuPont in the 1980s.

During the time of his employment, Neely unwittingly exposed his wife to the carcinogenic fibers that clung to his work clothes. Now Roger Neely, their son, has filed the lawsuit to claim that DuPont and other companies failed to warn his father and other workers about the dangers of asbestos, thereby leading to his mother's secondhand exposure and death.

Mesothelioma is diagnosed in approximately 3,000 new patients every year in the United States. Due to asbestos's widespread use in the mid-20th century, combined with mesothelioma's latency period of 20-50 years, these numbers are expected to peak within the coming decade. Asbestos litigation is expected to be the largest tort in American history, and DuPont has been the target of many lawsuits similar to Roger Neely's

Mesothelioma Virus-Based Therapy is Promising

A potential new therapy for mesothelioma could come in the form of a cancer-targeting virus that selectively destroys cancer cells while sparing healthy cells. Triggering that virus to express the antiviral protein, interferon-beta, could further enhance the immune response against the cancer, and reduce the risk of treatment side effects, according to a study of mice published in the October 1 issue of Cancer Research.

The viruses used in the study are called oncolytic viruses, and their potential lies in their ability to specifically target cancer cells without harming healthy cells. "The viruses that we use have a preferential tropism for cancer cells over normal cells. That is, they replicate in mesothelioma cells much more potently than they do in normal cells," explains lead author Richard Vile, PhD, Professor of Immunology and Richard M. Schulze Family Foundation Professor at the Mayo Clinic.

When normal, healthy cells come into contact with a virus, they respond by producing high levels of the antiviral protein, interferon. The interferon shuts down that cell, as well as neighboring cells, before the virus has a chance to replicate. "In contrast, many mesothelioma cells are defective in their response to interferon, so even though the virus infects them, those cells no longer shut down viral replication like normal cells do," Dr. Vile explains. This means that, unlike chemotherapy drugs, which destroy cancerous and healthy cells alike, oncolytic viruses destroy cancer cells specifically and are less likely to trigger harmful side effects.

To target mesothelioma cells in the study, Dr. Vile and his colleagues used vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which is in the same virus family as rabies. The VSV they used was designed to express interferon-beta.

The researchers injected either VSV-expressing interferon-B or a control substance into mesothelioma tumors in mice. Tumors shrank significantly in mice that received the VSV treatment. Four of eight mice were cured of their tumors, compared with zero of eight mice in the control group. What's more, all of the surviving mice rejected a later challenge when they were again injected with mesothelioma cells, indicating that the virus conferred long-term protection.

Triggering the virus to express interferon-beta enhanced the immune-stimulating activity involved in killing tumor cells, the researchers discovered. It also further protected healthy cells from the virus, preventing adverse side effects.

Dr. Vile cautions that the results of animal studies often do not translate into human benefits, but he says his team is pleased with the results thus far. "I think they give us an excellent platform to go into clinical trials and give us reason to believe that we will have an effect in human patients," he says.

The next step in his research is to determine the best vector platform to target mesothelioma. This study used VSV, but Dr. Vile's collaborator, Steven Albelda at the University of Pennsylvania, has been working with an adenovirus that also expresses interferon-beta. "One of our next preclinical steps is to see which platform is most effective in animals, and develop whichever one is clinically likely to be most potent," Dr. Vile says.

Source:

Willmon CL, Saloura V, Fridlender ZG, Wongthida P, Diaz RM, Thompson J, Kottke T, Federspiel M, Barber G, Albelda SM, Vile RG. Expression of IFN-beta enhances both efficacy and safety of oncolytic vesicular stomatitis virus for therapy of mesothelioma. Cancer Res. 2009;69:7713-7720.

Suit claims asbestos caused refinery worker's mesothelioma, death

A widow has filed suit against Chevron USA, alleging the oil giant negligently exposed her late husband, Billy Cunningham, to asbestos and inflicted him with mesothelioma.

Provost Umphrey attorney Keith Hyde filed the personal injury lawsuit on Betty Lou's behalf in Jefferson County District Court on Nov. 20.

"During Cunningham's employment with Gulf Oil, he used and was exposed to toxic materials including asbestos dust and/or fibers," the suit said. "As a result of such exposure, he developed an asbestos-related disease, mesothelioma, for which he died a painful and terrible death on Feb. 11, 2009."

The suit alleges that the oil conglomerate knew for decades that asbestos-containing products could cause the disease asbestosis and other asbestos-related cancers but still allowed its employees to work with and around the naturally occurring mineral.

"The defendant acted with malice...and gross neglect for exposing Cunningham to asbestos," the suit states.

"The defendant failed to timely and adequately warn workers of the dangers of asbestos...and failed to take the necessary engineering, safety, industrial hygiene and other precautions and provide adequate warning and training to ensure that the deceased was not exposed to the asbestos-containing products."

Asbestos, an excellent fire retardant, was used for centuries in the construction of buildings.

The plaintiff is suing for exemplary damages and seeks "to recover from the defendant an amount in excess of the jurisdictional limits of this Court.

"Further, plaintiff seeks a claim for prejudgment interest for all elements allowed them," the suit says.

Judge Donald Floyd, 172nd Judicial District, will preside over the case.

Case No. E185-373

2009年11月23日星期一

Asbestos removal an ongoing issue at Dallas renovation site

In Dallas, Texas, the city's Reunion Arena has been undergoing demolition since April. Now, after months of work, it appears that the project will begin wrapping up in December, with work to be fully completed in March 2010. Asbestos-related delays have slowed the project's progress considerably in recent months, but it is now hoped that the project is finally on track.

During the month of August, the city announced a three-month delay for the project. This was prompted after Styrofoam insulation in the arena's upper decks was uncovered. This added $50,000 to the project's budget.

Then, in September, waterproofing material which contained asbestos fibers was discovered in the arena's lower-level retaining walls. That discovery stretched the project's budget even further. Ultimately, it cost more than $450,000 to clean up the asbestos on site.

Cleaning up asbestos is often an expensive proposition, as workers must adhere to strict federal guidelines. Exposure to even a small amount of asbestos-containing materials may increase an individual's risk of developing asbestos-related illnesses like mesothelioma. Mesothelioma, a rare but aggressive cancer, may take decades to develop. Once symptoms emerge, the cancer can kill within months of being diagnosed. While there is no cure, some patients do benefit from chemotherapy and other treatment methods.

Total costs for the project now total more than $2.5 million, putting the project half a million dollars over the initial projected budget. Starting December 7th, the arena will begin to be pulled down. A&R Demolition plans to demolish the roof over a two-week period.

Australian asbestos cleanup completed, official says

In the land down under, asbestos has been a hot topic in recent months. Australian workers are worried about asbestos exposure from various products, as well as the inability of corporations like James Hardie to compensate victims of asbestos-related illnesses like mesothelioma. One bright spot in this asbestos furor comes from an Aboriginal village.

Max Munro, the chairman of the Merriman's Local Aboriginal Land Council, is pleased to announce that the cleanup of asbestos has been completed at a once-contaminated site at a Wallaga Lake koori village. The project, completed over the course of about a month, was overseen by contractor Nature Coast Demolition and Asbestos. A detailed site management plan was developed by independent experts from the asbestos management firm Parsons Brinkerhoff.

The cleanup of asbestos is vital, as exposure to even a small amount of the material can lead to mesothelioma, a rare cancer that sometimes kills within months of being diagnosed. The cancer affects thousands of new patients each year, and is incurable. However, mesothelioma treatment methods, including chemotherapy and surgery, do help some patients battle the disease.

"The cleanup has focused on regularly used areas in the village such as backyards and along pathways, as well as the old tip site and an area in front of our preschool," Munro said.

"This is a great result for the community and we are satisfied the job has been done well. We were pleased that local people were employed as part of the clean-up crew. They wore special protective clothing at all times. This whole issue is a community issue and Merriman's will work with all relevant groups to keep everyone informed of what is happening."

2009年11月22日星期日

Asbestos: A shameful legacy

The authorities knew it was deadly more than 100 years ago, but it was only banned entirely in 1999. The annual death rate will peak at more than 5,000 in 2016 – now MPs have a chance to do the decent thing.

By Emily Dugan

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They called it "the Barking cough". First it began like any other: a tickle in the chest and slight pain on breathing. Then, within a matter of months, the sufferer was in agony, gasping for air and eventually suffocating to death as a vicious cancer attacked their lungs waiting for the final lingering, inevitable end which might not come for decades.

The legacy of the Cape Asbestos factory in Barking, east London, where asbestos-related cancers continue to kill scores of residents, is a deadly one. Hundreds of people have died since the factory closed in 1968.

The story of Barking's "industrial killing machine" is a story repeated up and down the country where thousands of Britons continue to be blighted by their industrial past. Exposure to asbestos is now the biggest killer in the British workforce, killing about 4,000 people every year – more than who die in traffic accidents. The shocking figures are the grim legacy of the millions of tons of the dust shipped to Britain to make homes, schools, factories and offices fire resistant. It was used in products from household fabrics to hairdryers.

Those most at risk are ordinary workers and their families. Whether it was dockyard workers who unloaded the lethal cargoes, or those in the factories exposed to the fibres, or the carpenters, laggers, plumbers, electricians and shipyard workers who routinely used asbestos for insulation – all suffered. So did the wives who washed the work overalls and the children who hugged their parents or played in the dust-coated streets.

The exposure to asbestos in Britain is largely historical but the death toll is alarmingly etched on our future. Asbestos fibres can lie dormant on victims' lungs for up to half a century; deaths from asbestos in Britain will continue to rise until 2016.

Nor is it confined to Britain. The World Health Organisation says asbestos currently kills at least 90,000 workers every year. One report estimated the asbestos cancer epidemic could claim anywhere between five and 10 million lives before it is banned worldwide and exposure ceases.

Asbestos was hailed as the "magic mineral" when its tough, flexible but fire-resistant qualities were realised, but for more than a century doctors and others have been warning of its dangers. Asbestos dust was being inhaled into the lungs where it could lie unnoticed before causing crippling illnesses such lung cancer, asbestosis and mesothelioma which one medical professor has described as "perhaps the most terrible cancer known, in which the decline is the most cruel".

For people such as those in Barking who have seen their neighbours, relatives and friends suffer this excruciatingly painful and distressing death, there can be little consolation when they discover the first signs of asbestos exposure on their own lungs. These scars, known as pleural plaques, can be a warning that they too may develop one of the fatal cancers that inhaling the lethal fibres can result in.

On Wednesday, a meeting between MPs and government lawyers will determine if people suffering from pleural plaques can be paid the compensation that many believe they deserve. For 21 years, sufferers of pleural plaques were compensated by their employers for the scars caused by exposure to the deadly fibres, but in 2007 this was overturned by a Law Lords ruling. Politicians and medical experts accuse the Government of pandering to the insurance lobby and claim they are now ignoring crucial new medical evidence which reveals the physical and mental toll of pleural plaques.

In Dagenham Working Men's club, up the road from the site of the Cape asbestos factory, members of the local GMB laggers' branch gather for a beer to discuss the one deadly issue that continues to plague their members: asbestos. Jimmy Parrish, branch chairman, has a list of 67 of their 300 or so members affected by asbestos-related disease since 1998. Many of them were diagnosed with pleural plaques and 30 are now dead. "Hitler killed only one of my uncles," said Parrish. "Cape killed the rest."

Jon Cruddas, MP for Dagenham, said the lack of compensation for pleural plaques sufferers was scandalous. "If that amount of death occurred in any other profession it would be a national scandal," he said. "It's a working-class disease and it doesn't get the attention it should do: it's a life sentence. You've got to think about the corporate interests of insurance companies and compare that with a lagger. There's no equivalent in the power game here. The insurance industry says there's no link between pleural plaques and fatal forms of asbestos disease, but figures from the GMB suggest otherwise.

"It's extraordinary what's going on in our area. It's an epidemic. There's barely a family that doesn't have some experience of asbestos-related disease and it's going to get worse; it's not even at its peak yet."

The Barking and Dagenham Asbestos Support Group describes the Cape factory at Barking as an "industrial killing machine". Between 1981 and 2005, the number of men dying from the asbestos cancer mesothelioma in Barking reached 187, making it the worst area of London for asbestos-related disease and in the top 10 for the UK. It was not just workmen who suffered. Barking has the highest rate of mesothelioma for women in the country, with 60 women dying from the disease between 1981 and 2005. But these official figures are just the start. Since asbestos can lie dormant for up to 50 years, many people have long since left the area. Geoffrey Tweedale, an asbestos industry expert, said: "No one knows the death toll, but it's possibly in the thousands. Cape never had to release their records."

Although there were other sources of exposure in the area, Cape's processing of the fibres was on a different scale. The factory employed more than 10,000 people from the time it opened in 1913 to its closure in 1968.

Cape insisted asbestos was harmless even after the factory in Barking closed. Richard Gaze, former chief scientist for Cape Asbestos, defended its record throughout the 1970s until he died of mesothelioma himself, aged 65, in 1982.

Workers were told that drinking half a pint of milk would prevent illness and were left to toil in the thick dust with no masks. Dust from the building spewed on to the streets from giant fans, leaving cotton wool-like wisps to settle on the streets. The streets "looked like Christmas", residents recall. Children in Northbury School, which was adjacent to the factory, used to gather up this "snow" and throw it at each other.

Peter Williams of Field Fisher Waterhouse, solicitors specialising in asbestos disease, said, "I think Cape would have known that asbestos was highly dangerous. From the people we've spoken to that worked in the factory and lived in the surrounding area, no precautions were taken and no one from Cape ever mentioned it was dangerous."

Today, the Hart's Lane estate lies where the factory used to be. The only visible sign of its industrial past is a road name – Cape Close – but the legacy has lasted far longer than anyone might have guessed. Successive tests between 1997 and 2003 found asbestos dangerously near the surface in the soil of the estate.

Rita Ashdown, who died from mesothelioma in 2002, was among the first to perish. She insisted her exposure was from the 13 years she lived on the estate. The council's insurers paid her £40,000 compensation but denied responsibility. Now Dennis Gaffney is dying from the same disease and believes he too was exposed after spending time on the estate in the 1970s.

A spokesman for Barking and Dagenham council said it had commissioned "extensive independent experts' studies" of the Hart's Lane estate, most recently in 2006. "The studies concluded that any risk to the health of the estate's residents or visitors from asbestos is insignificant," he said.

On Wednesday MPs and others will meet government lawyers to press for the controversial 2007 Lords decision on plaques to be challenged. Andrew Dismore MP, who is attempting for a second time to get a bill through the House of Lords which would challenge the decision, said: "It's a manifest injustice. The law treats psychological injury differently from physical injury. The insurers are obviously trying to minimise their loss and the Government also has a potential liability for some of these cases. Come what may this issue has to be resolved."

Those with pleural plaques are 1,000 times more likely to suffer from an asbestos-related cancer than the rest of the population, but a government-commissioned report which has been used to justify the continued lack of compensation for sufferers said that the risk of pleural plaques sufferers contracting lung cancer was "very small". Dr Robin Rudd, the country's leading expert on asbestos-related disease, said the report had disregarded the latest evidence. "It's not a medical question," said Dr Rudd. "Jack Straw is just using medical evidence as a smoke screen. The report missed the last 10 years of medical evidence."

A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman said the House of Lords decision had raised "extremely complex and difficult issues which have required very careful consideration within Government". She added that the issues were still being actively considered "in order to be in a position to publish a final response as soon as possible".

Cape claimed it was unaware of the dangers, but as early as 1898, the chief inspector of factories in the UK reported that asbestos had "easily demonstrated" health risks. In Barking itself, alarm bells sounded in 1929 when the medical officer of health wrote in his annual report: "Many people in Barking are suffering from diseases of the lungs due to the inhalation of asbestos dust." By 1945, the medical officer wrote that asbestos was a "deadly and dangerous commodity" that should probably be banned.

A company spokesman said, "Cape has taken a very responsible approach to dealing with this issue, establishing an independent fund over two and a half years ago for the benefit of all claimants. The scheme covers all types of disease, paying compensation to claimants where due."

It was the ill-health of those living near the Barking factory that precipitated a nationwide shift in attitudes to using asbestos. A 1965 report showed that there had been a spate of mesothelioma cases among residents living near the Cape factory. The factory closed three years later, but its legacy will continue to be marked by graves.

Asbestos: Case studies...

The man exposed from visits to the estate (after the factory was gone)

Dennis Gaffney, 84, is dying from mesothelioma after being exposed to asbestos on the Hart's Lane estate which was built on the site of the old Cape factory. In the early 1970s, Dennis used to drive his wife Lily to see her mother, Lizzie Potter, four times a week after work. Mrs Potter had just moved into a brand new house built on the estate where the factory had been. Building work was still going on at the time and Dennis used to wait outside in his car with the windows down while his wife chatted to her mother. "I had a new car and I didn't want to get involved in women's talk, so I thought I'd leave them to it," explains Mr Gaffney. Sometimes when he got bored he would walk around and watch what was going on with the builders. It is now known that asbestos was not properly removed from the ground after the factory was shut down, but as Mr Gaffney wandered around the building site he had no idea of this. "There must have been dust in the air because there was no other time I could have been exposed to asbestos," said Mr Gaffney, who used to work in marketing. "I've had a biopsy and I'm still uncomfortable on my chest, but they just tell me to keep taking paracetamol."

The school boy whose 'snowball' fights in the yard killed him

George Dickerson used to have "snowball" fights with the thick white dust that gathered in the sports fields of Northbury Infant School he had no idea that his game would prove deadly. George, who spent his working life helping adults with learning difficulties, died from mesothelioma in 2006 aged 76 because his schoolyard was always showered in asbestos dust from the adjacent factory. His daughter Jane said: "He used to tell us about huge extractor fans that churned chunks of asbestos dust on to the lane that led to the school sports field. They used to collect it and bash it all together for snowball fights. As soon as he was diagnosed he knew it was from playing in it as a child. He was angry that nothing was done to protect local residents."

The wife killed by her husband's overalls (and the family destroyed by dust)

Jacqueline Merritt spent years washing her husband Don's overalls and shaking the dust off them. Don had worked for Cape and his clothes were covered in asbestos. In 2004, she died from mesothelioma, aged 60, and now her husband Don has pleural plaques on his lungs and worries he'll go the same way. Not only did he lose his wife to the deadly fibres, but his brother Fred and his brother-in-law Len Sturrock also died from asbestosis. "Me and Jacky had three boys together and they all missed their mum when she died and still do. My brother Fred worked with it for just eight weeks and he died 15 years ago. Asbestos has had a massive effect on our family."

The child killed by the hug he gave a family friend

Gordon Sanders, when he was still a schoolboy, used to get visits most days from his parents' best friend, Jimmy Dows, on his way home from work at the Cape factory. He loved kids, and when he came round, still in his dusty overalls, Gordon and his younger brother Philip would hug him and jump all over him. After Jimmy left, Gordon's mother would shake out the mat and leave newspaper to collect the dust. In 2005, Gordon, who was by then a primary school headteacher, died from mesothelioma, aged 57. Philip also died from lung cancer in 1988, when he was 35. At Gordon's inquest, the Coroner said that Philip's death was most likely also related to exposure to the fibres. Gordon's wife Ethel said: "The kids would crawl all over Jimmy because he was such a nice bloke. Nobody had any idea how bad the dust was. It's such a nasty disease. It's a feeling of gradually being suffocated. Gordon felt robbed of his future life with us. It seems so unjust that there was such a lack of regard for the health of people living in the area."

The mother killed by a deadly housing estate

Rita Ashdown had no idea when she moved into her new home in 1972 that it would kill her. The flat was on the Hart's Lane estate, built on the site of the old Cape factory. In 2002 she died from mesothelioma, aged 62. Her son, Eddie, said: "In 2001, tests showed that there was asbestos just a foot under ground. It wasn't until she was diagnosed that we started to think how she could have got it. We lived there for 13 years."

The lagger who mixed Cape's asbestos with his bare hands

Graham Taylor is living on borrowed time. When the 61-year-old was 15, he worked for Cape for a year, mixing drums of asbestos with his bare hands and without a mask. Four years ago he was frighteningly short of breath and saw a doctor. He was quickly diagnosed with asbestosis, and told he had between two and five years left. "When we'd finish work we'd look like we had jumped in bags of flour. My lungs are turning to concrete. I've been handed a death sentence and Cape wanted to quibble about money."

The family wiped out by asbestos

June Gibson's mother, Amy West, and her aunt, Maud Raisbeck, died of asbestosis aged 43 and 28 in the 1920s and 30s after working in the Cape factory. "The only compensation my mum got from Cape was an Italian marble gravestone," June, 79, said. "She weighed four stone before she died." Now June, who never worked there herself, has shadows on her lung too.

The former pro-footballer who can hardly walk

Peter Bragger, 60, was a semi-professional footballer and former captain of the England under-18 team. Now walking to the phone leaves him struggling for air. He worked for Cape from 1964 as a lagger. "I was first diagnosed with pleural plaques, but now I've got asbestosis. I've had a lower lobectomy which removed part of my lung. My life has been cut short."

The asbestos researcher

Marjorie Wells's job during the Second World War was to work in the lab at the Barking factory checking which lengths of asbestos fibres gave the best finish. Now 85, she is dying of mesothelioma. "There was dust everywhere, but it didn't worry me at all. We just carried on with our normal lives afterwards," said Marjorie. "It was a shock when I found out that's what was making me ill. Now I've got no energy at all."

The female factory worker

Marian Lethbridge had trained as a children's nurse, initially making only 15 shillings (75p) a week. When she saw an advert for women to work in the Cape factory for £4, she couldn't get there quickly enough. She worked there for only nine months, when she was 16, but that was enough: she was spinning the asbestos fibres, and they gave her no protection. Her husband, Ted Lethbridge, said: "At the end of the day they would get her to clean all the dust and she can remember it being so thick it hung off the light fittings. You've got to wonder why they were offering so much more money. She died of mesothelioma in 1997, when she was 69, and she was in so much pain. She said to me, 'Just let me die; I don't want any more.'"

Deadly history: The 'magic mineral' turns devasting killer

* Asbestos is dubbed the "magic mineral" after it is discovered that the rock minerals' fibrous qualities provide heat-resistant material. It is used in factories and homes. The same qualities made it deadly to workers exposed to the fibres.

* In 1898, UK factory inspectors first identified the "evil effects" of asbestos and its danger to workers' health. By 1955 a study reveals the clear lung-cancer risk. It was not totally banned in the UK until 1999, 101 years after the alarm was first raised.

* This week MPs will meet government lawyers about compensation for victims of the asbestos-related lung scarring, pleural plaques, which has not been available since the Law Lords controversially ruled against it in 2007.

* As well as pleural plaques, exposure to asbestos fibre can result in three potentially fatal diseases: asbestos-related lung cancer, mesothelioma (a deadly cancer that strangles the lungs and other internal organs) and asbestosis (a disease that attacks the lung tissues).

* The World Health Organisation estimates asbestos is currently killing 90,000 people a year worldwide. One authoritative study predicts up to 10 million people will die because of it. We won't know the true extent in the UK until 2016 when the death toll is expected to peak.

Have your say

Do you believe that a generation of Britons has been betrayed? Let us know below or email: sundayletters@independent.co.uk

One year after lethal explosion, a community remembers

In Pueblo, Colorado, just over one year has passed since a lethal explosion tore through the site of the Branch Inn, killing one woman, injuring several others, and damaging many local businesses. The explosion, fueled by natural gas, affected a large part of Pueblo's historic Union Avenue district. Three buildings were ripped apart by the force of the blast, and two others were forced to close for months while repairs were undertaken. Most tragically of all, Ashley Johnson, an employee of A Classic Boutique, was killed in the explosion.

Developers Joe and Jim Koncilja say that they plan to rebuild storefronts on the lots that housed A Classic Boutique and the Crossroads second-hand store. But Joe is quick to admit that the cost of rebuilding this once-flourishing business district will be a challenge.

"When you have an insurance policy on the building and it's a total loss, the only way you get that amount is if you rebuild," Joe Koncilja explained.

According to Joe Koncilja, the replacement value will be about $80 per square foot. Costs for rebuilding shot up drastically after asbestos was found at the site. Exposure to asbestos can lead to mesothelioma later in life. While mesothelioma is rare, it is a particularly aggressive form of cancer, can kill within months of being diagnosed, in some cases even if the patient is treated with chemotherapy.

Mesothelioma cancer affects under 3,000 new patients in America every year, with that number expected to grow in the coming decades. The removal of debris was financed in part by the insurance company, who provided $25,000. However, Koncilja says that because the debris had been tainted with asbestos during the blast, he had to spend $150,000 to clean up the rubble.

2009年11月21日星期六

Mesothelioma Law: Asbestos-Related Lawsuit Filed Against 38 Companies

A recently filed lawsuit by Cleveland J. Savoy is claiming 38 different companies are responsible for his development of an asbestos-related disease.

This is the second suit he has filed. In a previous suit issued against the companies, Savoy claimed a different asbestos-related injury in contrast to his most recent complaint.

Savoy believes he was exposed to asbestos-containing products while working as a carpenter. He also stated in the lawsuit that the companies negligently continued to manufacture asbestos-containing products where he worked even after knowing the hazards associated with asbestos.

Exposure to asbestos has been linked to several serious illnesses, including lung cancer, asbestosis and malignant mesothelioma. The latter can be particularly harmful because most patients unknowingly develop the cancer. Symptoms of mesothelioma may take as long as 50 years to arise, and by then the malignant tumors have already reached the advanced stages of development.

Treating an asbestos-related disease can be extremely difficult for doctors if not diagnosed during the early stages of development. Most treatment methods only offer palliative care and are not aimed at curing the disease.

According to the suit, Savoy claims the companies failed to test the asbestos-laden products before introducing them into the stream of commerce. He also says the companies were negligent for failing to notify him about the dangers of asbestos in a timely manner.

Savoy states he has experienced physical pain, mental anguish, lost wages, medical costs, loss of earning capacity, and sustained disfigurement and physical impairment.

In the lawsuit that was filed on Nov. 5, 2009, Savoy is seeking unspecified actual and exemplary damages, plus costs, pre- and post-judgment interest and other relief the Court deems appropriate.

Thousands of lawsuits similar to Savoy's have been filed against companies who conspired to hide information pertaining to the hazards of asbestos. Those experiencing symptoms of an asbestos-related disease, which may include shortness of breath, chest pain, persistent cough and abdominal pain, should be checked for signs of asbestos exposure by a qualified doctor.

Additional information about mesothelioma and asbestos exposure may be found through the Mesothelioma Center.

Mesothelioma Victims Back Asbestos Awareness Campaign

Kent, UK—Two victims of the rare, severe cancer known as mesothelioma are backing a British Health and Safety Executive campaign that is publicizing the dangers of asbestos exposure to tradesmen.

Former electrician Jack Rekert, who was diagnosed with this unusual cancer of the lungs' outer lining two years ago, has undergone 18 weeks' worth of chemotherapy. Rekert, 62, was exposed to asbestos while working in a factory in the 1980s. Although the chemo has given him some relief, he says the worry of wondering whether his cancer will flare up again in the near future has taken its toll. "It's put my life on hold," said Rekert. "I"ll definitely die from this, every day is bonus."

Rekert is among the few mesothelioma sufferers who have a life expectancy beyond two years past the date of diagnosis. In fact, the average patient lives for only 18 months after being given the news that they have this form of cancer.

Mesothelioma is an unusual disease, in that it can take decades to develop to the point where it is symptomatic. This means that victims may live with the cancer for years and have no idea. Most often, it has reached advanced stages by the time it is diagnosed, leaving patients' treatment options limited. There is currently no cure for mesothelioma.

Beverly Towersey, whose husband John died in May 2009 from the cancer, is also standing behind the new HSE campaign to educate current and former workers about the dangers of asbestos and asbestos-containing materials in the workplace.

"I just really want to get the message across that tradesmen must be really vigilant about the dangers of asbestos, because it is a killer," said Towersey, 64. Her husband had worked as an apprentice carpenter, and later as a builder, in the 1960s. Carpenters and builders are among the occupations most at risk for asbestos exposure, because of their employment at close proximity to many asbestos building products.

The Heath and Safety Executive Campaign, which is called "Asbestos: The Hidden Killer" is reaching out to carpenters, plumbers, electricians, joiners and others with high risk. Anyone who has worked in a building that was being built, demolished or renovated before 2000 should be aware that they may have been exposed to asbestos, and take the necessary medical precautions.

According to the Health and Safety Executive, approximately 20 tradesmen die each week across Britain from mesothelioma and other asbestos diseases

Asbestos work continues at New York school

In Massena, New York, an asbestos consultant working with the Massena Central School District says that the district is making strides in terms of asbestos issues. The consultant, Peter B. Schuyler, vice president of KAS Environmental and Geological Consulting in Williston, Vermont, has been working with the district for almost two years to identify asbestos risks. Schuyler has also helped to compile asbestos abatement plans for the district. According to him, most of the district's buildings are in good shape.

However, the high school still needs improvement. Of the 212 asbestos-containing areas originally identified, only 75 still have yet to be addressed. According to Mr. Schuyler, the remaining asbestos that is friable (likely to break down into small pieces that could be inhaled) exists only in maintenance areas and crawl spaces that are inaccessible to most people.

Exposure to asbestos can be life-threatening. Mesothelioma, a rare but aggressive form of cancer, is arguably the most serious health problem generated by exposure to asbestos-laden materials. Mesothelioma can develop slowly over the course of many decades, often going undiagnosed until it has reached the later stages of development. The cancer often causes death in patients within two years of being diagnosed. While there is no cure, treatments like chemo can help some patients if the cancer is caught before it spreads too far.

Schuyler believes that one of his primary goals is to find "issues that can't be foreseen," including asbestos hidden beneath floor tiles.

Asbestos materials in aging school buildings is a serious health concern across the country, as countless schools contain asbestos within insulation and floor and ceiling tiles. Unfortunately, due to strict budget restrictions in many school districts, asbestos removal is often put on the back burner, as the cost of abatement is generally quite high. Of course, following abatement the district must replace the asbestos materials with a safer option, which also generates a hefty bill.

Parents of school-aged children can obtain information regarding asbestos in their child's school, including reports of previous asbestos testing or abatement.

Mesothelioma Asbestos Lawyer Videos Added to Lawyer Central’s Mesothelioma Resource Center

Lawyer Central has added new legal videos to its Mesothelioma Resource Center, bringing the total number of mesothelioma asbestos lawyer videos to over 100. In addition to its comprehensive video collection, the Mesothelioma Resource Center features answers and information about mesothelioma cancer symptoms and risk factors, mesothelioma diagnosis and treatment, mesothelioma verdicts and settlements, and a list of products containing asbestos.

The new mesothelioma legal videos feature several mesothelioma asbestos attorneys, including Robert R. Hatten, attorney Donald N. Patten, and attorney Michael B. Serling. Topics discussed and explained in the videos include asbestos exposure in shipyards, asbestos claim investigation, asbestos disease latency period, asbestos disease lawsuits, current asbestos risks, preparing a mesothelioma case, maritime law and mesothelioma lawsuits, mesothelioma case expectations, and more.

In a video entitled "Dangerous Asbestos Products," asbestos lawyer Michael B. Serling explains, "Many people don't realize that there were over 3,000 types of products that contained asbestos in a wide diversity of areas of society…Some very unique products contained asbestos. For example, ironing boards used to have a lining under the covering that contained asbestos. Theater curtains were made of asbestos. Asbestos was used in the brewing of beer process. The amount of products that contained asbestos up until the 1980s was very wide in scope."

Visit Lawyer Central's Mesothelioma Resouce Center  to watch these videos and learn more about mesothelioma and asbestos cancer.

If you are looking for a mesothelioma lawyer to represent you in an asbestos exposure lawsuit, complete the Free Mesothelioma Case Evaluation form.  Lawyer Central's national attorney network includes many experienced mesothelioma asbestos lawyers. We will connect you with a local mesothelioma attorney who can explain your legal options and ensure that your rights are protected.

About Lawyer Central

The Lawyer Central Network is an exclusive nationwide network of attorneys highly dedicated to their unique areas of practice, including mesothelioma litigation. Lawyer Central is emerging as the leading public relations and mixed media marketing organization for fast-growing law firms and forward-thinking attorneys. Lawyer Central membership includes a variety of media exposure ranging from practice area video filming, through interviews and complete public relations and internet relations management.

Cure Mesothelioma Cancer the Natural Way

NaturalNews) Mesothelioma is a rare cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. Is it possible to cure mesothelioma the natural way, given its poor prognosis? The answer is a resounding yes! In recent years, Paul Kraus, Rhio O`Connor and others chose to avoid conventional cancer therapies, feeling that they would have a better chance of survival by using supplements, herbs, rest and a nutritious diet. In so doing, they have provided living proof that curing this malignant cancer and living a long and healthy life is possible.

What Exactly is Mesothelioma Cancer?

A person may have been exposed to asbestos at work and inhaled asbestos dust or fibers. The fibers then become lodged in the membranes that surround the lungs, heart or abdomen. Over a period of time, these fibers cause tissue abnormalities, resulting in mesothelioma cancer.

Symptoms of Mesothelioma

Many people are not too worried when mesothelioma symptoms first appear, since the symptoms are vague and are sometimes thought to be nothing more than a bad case of flu. Symptoms can include shortness of breath, chest pain and/or a persistent cough.
Once diagnosed, mesothelioma carries a very poor prognosis particularly because it is a cancer that is often diagnosed late. Many people diagnosed with this disease are told to "put your affairs in order".

Conventional treatments include chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.

Hope comes in the form of those who have survived mesothelioma. A closer look at their methods of fighting cancer the natural way can encourage others who have contracted the disease and help them to see that life can be extended for many years.

Mesothelioma Survivors

Mesothelioma survivor Paul Kraus was determined to fight his peritoneal mesothelioma cancer the natural way. He became a vegetarian and started a rigorous anti-cancer diet which included organic fresh fruits and vegetables, grains, nuts and rice. In addition, he added many vitamins and supplements to his daily routine, consumed freshly squeezed juices and tried a treatment known as "ozone therapy". The rationale for ozone therapy is that cancer cells do not thrive in an oxygenated environment.

Paul Kraus' prognosis was very poor and he was told by his doctors, very honestly, that his chance of success with chemotherapy was not high at all. In addition, he was informed that the quality of his life would be severely compromised by the heavy chemotherapy treatments that would be prescribed. He was given a year to live but has survived a further eleven years by going the natural route.

Mesothelioma survivor Rhio O'Connor contracted pleural mesothelioma after asbestos exposure in his youth. He decided against surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. Instead, with some help from physicians, he developed a regimen that included consuming more than 100 supplements daily, following a nutritious diet and practicing holistic, mind-body medicine.

O`Connor was inspired by Hippocrates who, more than 2,000 years ago, said, "Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food". O`Connor is the published author of the book "They Said Months, I Chose Years: A Mesothelioma Survivor`s Story."

Told that he had less than a year to live and to take his wife on a cruise, he fought mesothelioma the natural way and lived a further 7 years to tell the tale.

Conclusion

It is a fact that many malignant mesothelioma survivors have taken steps to improve or enhance their immune system. Certain herbs have been used throughout history for the treatment of various cancers. Because natural substances are difficult to patent, drug companies will typically not invest money to research and develop these substances.

With careful investigation and research, the mesothelioma victim can make an informed choice as to the best way to fight the cancer and prolong life.

Sources:

www.asbestos.com, Article "Mesothelioma Survivors`,information retrieved 25 October, 2009

www.survivingmesothelioma.com, Article "Surviving Mesothelioma: A Patient`s Guide", information retrieved 25 October, 2009

Book "They Said Months, I Chose Years: A Mesothelioma Survivor`s Story", by Rhio O`Conner, Published by Cancer Monthly.

How Mr Brown fared when the Telegraph readers had their say

GORDON Brown arrived in the East Midlands vowing to get tough on antisocial behaviour and youth offending.

But after he met someone working every day with young people, in the shape of Derby's Baby J, he was left with food for thought on the subject, and ordered his staff to get more details and keep in touch with the campaigner.

Baby J owns a recording studio in Arthur Street which runs evening workshops for teenagers.

He believes violence such as that which led to the death of teenager Kadeem Blackwood, could be cut if more activities were provided for youngsters.

When Mr Brown sat at his table at a specially arranged meeting of the Cabinet at the Albert Hall Conference Centre, Baby J asked him: "Why are there no activities or funding that actually help the poorest young people in my city when £500,000 of local police money was spent on policing a racist BNP festival down the road in our county?"

His question caught the ear of the leader, who even referred to his conversation with Baby J when he addressed a conference afterwards.

And he answered his questioned by saying: "We have a range of projects around the country which put on positive activities for young people and we are about to announce a programme of youth centres around the country which will be paid for by assets of pension funds."

Mr Brown asked Baby J what the Government could do to support music projects such as his.

Baby J made clear to Mr Brown that youngsters should be offered activities they were interested in.

"There are community centres in every area but young people don't go because they are closed after 7pm or in the holidays and when they are open there is nothing in there that interests them," Baby Jay said. "It wouldn't take a lot of money to get music systems in them.

"It is about finding out from the community what youngsters want rather than imposing stuff on them from outside."

His comments attracted the attention of other Cabinet ministers, including work and pensions minister Yvette Cooper, who shared a table with Baby J and other Derby Telegraph readers.

Cabinet Office staff promised to be in touch with Baby J within a matter of weeks to find out more from him about what he believes can steer youngsters away from crime and anti-social behaviour.

Baby J may have started to sway the politicians, but they will have to do more to convince him.

"When I left Derby to speak to the Prime Minister there were children in the city with no prospects," he said.

"When I go back to Derby, there will still be youngsters with no prospects.

"I know the politicians have done a lot of listening, but I will start to have faith when something is actually done, when they get the local authority to spend money where it is needed or change policies."

Baby J was one of four Derby Telegraph readers who got to share a table with the Prime Minister.

Shokat Lal, chairman of Derby's Muslim Forum, had the chance to quiz the PM about the war in Afghanistan.

He said: "There is a problem of those extremists within Derby using the war in Afghanistan as a hook to get people involved in extremist activities. How is the war in Afghanistan making the UK a more safe and secure place?"

Mr Brown said: "We have traced back most terrorists back to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"Three quarters of the terrorist incidents we have had to deal with started in Pakistan and were organised in Pakistan and Al-Qaida is the source."

But Mr Lal challenged Mr Brown, saying: "I fear we are not keeping an eye on our own backyard and what's going on here. There are people trying to prevent extremism but extremists are using the war as a hook."

Afterwards, Mr Lal said he was disappointed with the response.

"I feel there is a short sightedness and he failed to recognised the impact the war is having in the UK," he said.

But the Cabinet members did manage to change the views of one Derby Telegraph reader.

When Bernard Dean spotted Justice Secretary Jack Straw waiting to go into the conference, he was clear he would challenge him on the issue of getting compensation for mesothelioma victims like himself from insurance companies.

He felt Mr Straw had failed to do anything towards that aim, despite previously being interested in the issue.

So when Mr Straw sat down next to Mr Dean, the Sandiacre resident asked him what the Government was doing to help mesothelioma victims get compensation if they could not find the insurer of the company that exposed them to asbestos.

Mr Straw said: "I have been looking at this very carefully. One of the things we are looking at is getting insurers to agree to a register so they are on a database.

"The other thing is looking to create a pool of funds out of payments into insurance companies so that when there is a problem of identifying the company responsible, the money can be used out of that pool."

Mr Dean also raised his concerns with Mr Brown, who lost a colleague, Scottish MP John MacDougall, to the disease last year.

Mr Brown said: "We are looking at this issue at this very moment. Any attempt to deny liability, which happens, is unacceptable."

Mr Dean was pleased with the response.

"This has totally changed my view. I was impressed with Gordon Brown and especially Jack Straw who really listened.

"They have said they are looking at this issue and seemed to grasp the points I was making straight away so now I'm looking forward to something being done to help other victims of this disease."

UK family wins asbestos payout in death of railway worker

The family of a railway worker in Oxford, United Kingdom whose death was tied to cancer caused by asbestos exposure received a payout of approximately £100,000.

In 2005, Dudley Maasz was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a disease resulting from exposure to asbestos. He had been exposed to the substance during his time in the 1940s as a railway worker for Great Western Railway, where he took part in cleaning engines and serving as a fireman. Maasz died in July 2006.

Cquote1.svg We were able to establish that Mr Maasz death was caused by asbestos... Cquote2.svg

—Brigitte Chandler

The company BRB (Residuary) Ltd., the successor to British Railways Board, came to an agreement to give Maasz's family a payout of £98,000 and costs as a settlement.

Brigitte Chandler, the Maasz family's solicitor, told BBC News, "We were able to establish that Mr Maasz death was caused by asbestos during his employment at the Oxford works."

Cquote1.png ...he'd been eaten away, I felt so sorry for him. Cquote2.png

—Norman Maasz

Dudley Maasz's brother Norman described him to BBC News as outgoing, and a "friendly chap". He said that he had noticed his brother begin to complain of shoulder pain approximately four years ago, and subsequently began to sleep more and later was bedridden a majority of the time.

"One day I looked at him and thought — my goodness — he was half the size, he'd been eaten away, I felt so sorry for him," said Norman Maasz.

BBC News reported that no individual from BRB (Residuary) Ltd. was available to provide a comment about the payout to the Maasz family.