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Asbestos Cancer

Mesothelioma Occupations
 

Occupations Commonly Associated With Later Development of Mesothelioma

Occupations that deal with asbestos and which are often associated with the onset of mesothelioma later in life are as follows:

Asbestos Workers Firefighters Oil Refinery
Auto Mechanics Furnace Technicians Power Plant
Blacksmith Gas Station Attendant Railroad
Boilermakers Insulation Workers Sanders
Brick Masons Iron Workers Servicemen
Carpenters Machinists Sheetmetal
Chemical Techs Masons Shipbuilders
Clothing Ironers Merchant Marines Shipyard Workers
Construction Metal Lathers Steamfitters
Cosmetologists Material Movers Teachers
Drafters Mine Workers Textile Workers
Drywall Tapers Molders Woodworker

These are additional occupations that may also deal with asbestos:

•Insulators •Pipe Fitters •Plumbers
•Electricians •Painters •Plasters
•Crane Operators •Floor Coverers •Pot Tenders
•Welders •Paper Mill Workers •Custodians
•Steam Fitters •Tile Setters •Aerospace
•Aircraft Mechanic •Building Engineers •Demolition Crews
•Telephone Linemen •Packing/Gasket Manufactorin Workers •Protective Clothing Manufactoring
•Rubber Worker •Warehouse Worker •Home Improvement
•Hospital •Schools •Loading Docks
•Glass Factory Worker •Building Inspectors •Bulldozer Operator
•Manufacturing Inspectors •Excavating machine operators •Heavy Equipment Mechanics
•Job and Die setters •Insurance Adjusters and Investigators •Building Managers
•Mixing Operatives •Sculptors •Sawyers
•Teachers •Tinsmiths •Weavers
•Hod Carriers •Winding Operatives •Technicians

Asbestos has been used in association with a number of occupations in addition to those above. Furthermore, a number of former military personnel, particularly naval, came into contact with asbestos during their service. Massive amounts of asbestos were used in shipbuilding and commercial construction prior to the mid-1970's. Anyone involved with those industries is at a higher risk for developing an asbestos-related disease, including mesothelioma. Exposure may have been direct or indirect, lengthy or brief. The typical exposure period is lengthy, but some persons with short but intense exposures develop mesothelioma. Mesothelioma can also occur from non-occupational exposure, as evidenced by manifestation of the disease in women whose exposure came from washing the clothing of men (father, husband, son) who worked with asbestos.

A unique feature of asbestos-related injuries is the long latency period between exposure to asbestos and the onset of the injury or disease. For mesotheliomas, the latency period is between 15 and 50 years, or more. That means that a person could have been exposed to asbestos 50 years ago, and develop mesothelioma today. The average mesothelioma latency period is approximately 35 - 40 years.

According to the National Cancer Institute, approximately 3,000 cases per year of malignant mesothelioma are being reported in the United States, and the incidence appears to be increasing. The disease is three times more common in men than in women. In men, the occurrence of mesothelioma is ten times higher in men between the ages of 60-70 as compared to men between the ages of 30-40. Occupational exposure to asbestos over the past fifty years in the United States is calculated to have occurred in approximately eight million people.

 

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