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FAQs
6. What Trades And Occupations Worked With Asbestos?
There were a wide variety of
trades and jobs that were exposed to asbestos dust from building
products or raw asbestos. It is not just the workers who worked
directly with asbestos and asbestos products that are getting
sick from asbestos diseases such as asbestosis, lung cancer
and mesothelioma. The victims include workers who worked near
or around other people who used these these materials. Because
asbestos dust becomes airborne and can be invisible, the fibers
travel throughout a worksite and expose all of the workers
at that location. In a single sweeping, millions and millions
of asbestos fibers can be released into the breathing zone
of anybody in that vicinity. Over the course of a career,
a worker could have breathed several billion fibers, some
of which lodge in the lung, and cause injury.
Some of the occupations that
are typically associated with the onset of mesothelioma and
other asbestos diseases include:
- Pipe Coverers
- Laborers
- Brake Mechanics
- Auto Mechanics
- Millwrights
- Painters
- Plasterers
- Merchant Marine Seaman
- Pipefitters
- Cement Finishers
- Foundry Workers
- Carpenters
- Plumbers
- Roofers
- Sailors
- Navy Yard Workers/Yardbirds
- Paperworkers
- Electricians
- Bricklayers
- Boilermakers
- Automotive mechanics
- Machinists
- Lathers
- Insulators
- Welders
- Sheetmetal workers
- Crane Operators
- Aircraft Mechanics
- Engineers
- Steamfitters
- Masonry Workers
- Longshoreman
- Plant workers
- Powerhouse Workers
- Railroad Workers
- Inspectors
- Maintenance Workers
- Paper Mill Workers
- Tapers
These are just some of the occupations
involved. If you have been diagnosed with an asbestos disease
(lung cancer, mesothelioma or asbestosis), contact
Belluck & Fox to have your claim evaluated.
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