While there's no magic formula to determine your exact risk, if you know or suspect you've been exposed to asbestos, you should let your doctor know. He or she can then be vigilant about performing appropriate tests and observing any symptoms that may be indicative of the beginning stages of an asbestos cancer.
The use of asbestos has fortunately become more and more limited in the United States, as restrictions on it have increased over the last few decades (although it is important to note that asbestos is still not banned in the US).
However, the latency period in asbestos cancers is long, often decades, so workers who dealt extensively with any of the over 5,000 products that contained asbestosincluding floor tile, paints, automotive brake shoes, roofing materials, and moremay still be at risk for one or more asbestos-related cancers.
According to the CDC, industries that show an increased risk for asbestos cancer include:
While the continuous, regular exposure of industrial workers would logically increase the risk of developing an asbestos cancer, no known level of exposure is safe. Therefore, it is not just workers who are at risk of getting an asbestos cancer.
Bystander asbestos exposure such as those who live near asbestos factories or families of asbestos workers are at an increased risk of developing asbestos cancer. Wives who shook out and washed asbestos-laced clothing or children who hugged their asbestos-dust-covered dad just home from work, have been diagnosed with asbestos cancers such as mesothelioma.
Then there are those who never thought they were working around asbestos: the do-it-yourselfer whose home improvements unknowingly brought them into contact with asbestos insulation. The student who attended summer school 30 years ago in an old building that was being renovating at the time. The renovators themselves who weren't told they were ripping out asbestos materials.
The CDC estimates that these secondary exposures to asbestos put an estimated 1.3 million construction and general industry workers at risk.
Since 1900, enough asbestos cement pipe has been manufactured to circle the earth more than 17 times. Asbestos has been used in everything from cigarette filters to mattresses, although the most common uses for asbestos over the last century been in materials for industrial and construction purposes. [Products that contain asbestos.]
Mesothelioma cancer is a tumor affecting the thin membranes lining some of the body's internal cavities and organs. An aggressive and deadly cancer, mesothelioma's only known cause is asbestos exposure, making it exceedingly preventable, had asbestos companies cared to try. [Mesothelioma asbestos cancer.]
Interested in learning about new and novel treatments for asbestos cancer? Reading up on the latest clinical trials can be a good way to learn about the cutting edge in medical research. You may even find a program you and your physician think you could benefit from participating in. [Asbestos Cancer: Clinical Trials]
With a century of medical evidence, secret memos, and long-winded depositions, asbestos attorneys have their work cut out for them. Couple this with the task of finding specific job sites and products for each client, and it's clear to see why asbestos lawsuits are complex.
Asbestos lawyers who have been involved since the beginning have the experience and knowledge to aggressively try your case. [Asbestos Cancer Lawyers.]