FAQs
3. What Did the
Asbestos Companies Know And When Did They Know It?
The companies that manufactured,
sold and installed asbestos products had extensive knowledge
of the deadly hazards of asbestos as early as 1920. Yet, these
corporations waited decades to provide warnings to workers
and to the general public. In some cases, warnings were never
provided.
In addition to this actual knowledge
on the part of asbestos corporations, the evidence available
in medical books and journals revealed the dangers of asbestos
exposure long before millions of American workers were exposed.
Here's a brief timeline of the
known dangers:
Late 1800's: The first
reports of lung disease in people working in asbestos factories.
1918: US government report
stating that it was the practice of American and Canadian
life insurance companies not to sell coverage to asbestos
workers due to the assumed injurious health consequences.
A reference reports that the Chief Inspector in England is
aware of deaths and lung disease in workers at asbestos plants.
1924: British medical
journal publishes first widely available article describing
death of a 33-year old woman who worked in an asbestos textile
plant.
1927: A pathologist issues
a report describing asbestosis as a disease that involves
the scarring of the lungs and shortness of breath. The report
indicates that asbestosis could be fatal.
1928: Journal of the American
Medical Association publishes editorial called "Pulmonary
Asbestosis." Articles and case reports describing incidence
of asbestosis are published in the United States and worldwide.
1930: Dr. Merewether,
a famous researcher, publishes first clinical examination
of hundreds of workers in the asbestos industry. He found
that one out of four workers was suffering from asbestosis.
Dr. Merewether further concluded:
* That asbestosis was a disease
of latency, i.e. that workers exposed to asbestos wouldn't
show signs of injury for many years;
* That asbestos dust had to be
controlled through ventilation and the use of respirators.
* That workers exposed to asbestos
should be informed and warned in order to assure a "sane
appreciation of the risk."
* That the finished products
created dust that should be controlled and minimized.
Dr. Merewether's medical description
of asbestos disease mirrors exactly the description of the
disease today. His recommendations, if implemented by the
asbestos industry, would have saved tens of thousands of lives
and injuries to American workers.
1930s: Reports demonstrated
that asbestosis was occurring in workers with as little as
nine months of exposure.
1933: First American case
report of asbestosis in an insulation worker.
1934: Researchers report
cases of asbestosis and lung cancer in an asbestos factory.
Many of the workers had less than six months of exposure to
asbestos. Reports were also published of asbestosis from workplace
exposure to products, including boiler workers, custodians
and insulators.
1942: Researchers report
that lung cancer in building trades workers is likely caused
by asbestos. Dr. Heuper, a noted occupational physician and
the first chief of the environmental cancer section of the
National Cancer Institute, suggests that asbestos causes Asbestosis
as well as cancer in the manufacturing process as well as
through finished building products such as insulation and
packing materials. In 1949, Dr. Heuper warns that asbestos
was a cancer risk to the general population. By this time
there were over 200 references in the widely available literature
regarding asbestos and disease.
1943: First case of a
mesothelioma-like tumor reported.
1947: Dr. Merewether finds that
13% of asbestosis cases also had cancer of the lungs or pleura.
1949: Encyclopedia Brittanica
lists asbestos as a recognized cause of occupational and environmental
cancer. The Journal of the American Medical Association concludes
that asbestos is probably linked to occupational cancer.
1953: Mesothelioma is
reported in an asbestos insulator.
1955: A major epidemiological
study demonstrates that asbestos workers have a tenfold risk
above the general population of contracting lung cancer.
1960: Another epidemiological
study confirms reports that exposure to asbestos causes mesothelioma.
This study also included the children and wives of asbestos
workers who contracted mesothelioma.
1964: Dr. Selikoff, a
major researcher at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York, confirms
widespread disease among asbestos workers and from family
members living with asbestos workers. A large number of job
titles were implicated in the report, including construction
workers, electricians, plumbers, carpenters, etc. Selikoff
pointed out that asbestos did not "respect" job
titles and could harm any person who breathed in asbestos.
After 1964, the medical literature
continued to identify asbestos as a major carcinogen and environmental
hazard. Over 200 publications described the hazards of asbestos
by the end of the 1960's.
Notwithstanding this knowledge,
and the death that resulted from breathing in the dust from
these products, the manufacturers and installers of these
materials continued to sell and install asbestos products
without warning workers, reducing the dust or substituting
equally effective materials in place of the asbestos. Tragically,
many companies had secured additional knowledge regarding
the connection between asbestos and cancer as early as the
1930's. However, these companies altered research reports
to hide these findings from the public.
The knowledge listed above only
reflects a small sample of the evidence that Belluck &
Fox uses on behalf of its clients. Additional information
is gathered for each individual case.
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