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Asbestos Cancer
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Asbestos cancer law includes those laws that have been
established by various governments that regulate
exposure to asbestos in the workplace. Asbestos cancer
law also allows people who are injured as a result of
prolonged asbestos exposure to seek compensation from
their employer. This is often done in various class
action lawsuits on the part of employees against
companies that manufactured asbestos related products.
Asbestos has historically been part of over 5000
different products and has been in use for over
hundreds of years. Asbestos finds its use in a wide
variety of appliances - vehicle brakes, building
materials, ships, roofing materials, plastics, paints,
some paper products, and much more. Asbestos exposure
has proved very harmful to human health. Even though
the ill effects of asbestos exposure have been well
known for quite some time, some organizations still
choose to use asbestos. Not only that, most structures
still have products containing asbestos. Shipyard,
automotive, factory, construction, custodial and
building industry workers are all exposed to asbestos
in greater or lesser extents.
Asbestos laws protect people from the harmful
consequences of asbestos exposure. Asbestos exposure
at dangerous levels can lead to asbestosis- a build up
of scar tissue in the lungs. This results from
inhaling asbestos fibers that interrupt normal lung
functioning and can finally lead to death or
disability. Mesothelioma cancer is a severe and in
most cases deadly cancer and the main reason for its
occurrence is asbestos exposure. In most cases it
takes a large time to diagnose the illness and hence
the survival time for mesothelioma victims is
extremely short; on average a patient has only one
more year to live. Asbestos law allows a victim to
recover medical expenses, lost income, and
compensation for pain and suffering from his employer.
If a victim has died because of asbestos related
disease, asbestos law also permits the victim's family
to recover damages related to the injury.
Asbestos laws give certain guidelines to determine
permissible exposure levels for asbestos in the
workplace: 0.1 fibers per cubic centimeter for an
eight hour work period and one fiber per cubic
centimeter in any given thirty minute time period. The
law also enforces on the employers the need to conduct
frequent exposure monitoring and create regulated work
areas. Under asbestos law, the employers must also
provide their employees with protective respiratory
and clothing equipment, adequate hygiene facilities,
training on how to safely work with asbestos and
routine health exams in case they are at a risk of
being exposed to asbestos.
About the Author: Gus Benson runs http://www.mesothelioma-asbestosis-cancer.info,
a website dedicated to mesothelioma and asbestosis
related cancer information. Click to visit his site:
http://www.mesothelioma-asbestosis-cancer.info
Source: www.isnare.com
Written by: Gus Benson
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Mesothelioma
has been misspelled numerous ways:
mesothlioma, mesothelioma, mesothelium , mesotheioma,
mesotheloma, mesothelima, mesothelioa, msothelioma,
mesotehrioma, meothelioma, mesthelioma, mesohelioma,
mesotelioma, mesothleioma, mesotehlioma, mesotherioma,
misotehlioma, misotehrioma, misothelioma, misotherioma,
misothleioma, nesothe11oma, nesothel1oma, nesothelioma,
mesothelioam, mesothelimoa, mesotheloima, mesotheiloma,
mesohtelioma, mestohelioma, meosthelioma, mseothelioma,
emsothelioma, mesotheliom, esothelioma |
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