Who is at risk for an asbestos-related disease?
           
Everyone is exposed to asbestos at some time during their  life. Low levels of asbestos are present in the air, water, and soil. But most people do not become ill from the exposure. People who  become ill from asbestos are usually those who are exposed to it on a  regular basis, most often in a job where they work directly with the  material or through substantial environmental contact.
Since the early 1940s, millions of American workers have been  exposed to asbestos. Health hazards from asbestos fibers have been  recognized in workers exposed in the shipbuilding trades, asbestos  mining and milling, manufacturing of asbestos textiles and other  asbestos products, insulation work in the construction and building  trades, and a variety of other trades. Demolition workers, drywall  removers, asbestos removal workers, firefighters, and automobile workers  also may be exposed to asbestos fibers. Studies evaluating the cancer  risk experienced by automobile mechanics exposed to asbestos through  brake repair are limited, but the overall evidence suggests there is no  safe level of asbestos exposure.  As a result of Government regulations and improved work practices,  today’s workers (those without previous exposure) are likely to face  smaller risks than did those exposed in the past.
Individuals involved in the rescue, recovery, and cleanup at  the site of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center  (WTC) in New York City are another group at risk of developing an  asbestos-related disease. Because asbestos was used in the construction  of the North Tower of the WTC, when the building was attacked, hundreds  of tons of asbestos were released into the atmosphere. Those at greatest  risk include firefighters, police officers, paramedics, construction  workers, and volunteers who worked in the rubble at Ground Zero. Others  at risk include residents in close proximity to the WTC towers and those  who attended schools nearby. These individuals will need to be followed  to determine the long-term health consequences of their exposure.
One study found that nearly 70 percent of WTC rescue and  recovery workers suffered new or worsened respiratory symptoms while  performing work at the WTC site. The study describes the results of the  WTC Worker and Volunteer Medical Screening Program, which was  established to identify and characterize possible WTC-related health  effects in responders. The study found that about 28 percent of those  tested had abnormal lung function tests, and 61 percent of those without  previous health problems developed respiratory symptoms. However, it is important to note that these symptoms may be related to exposure to debris components other than asbestos.
Although it is clear that the health risks from asbestos  exposure increase with heavier exposure and longer exposure time,  investigators have found asbestos-related diseases in individuals with  only brief exposures. Generally, those who develop asbestos-related  diseases show no signs of illness for a long time after their first  exposure. It can take from 10 to 40 years or more for symptoms of an  asbestos-related condition to appear.
There is some evidence that family members of workers heavily  exposed to asbestos face an increased risk of developing mesothelioma.  This risk is thought to result from exposure to asbestos fibers brought  into the home on the shoes, clothing, skin, and hair of workers. To  decrease these exposures, Federal law regulates workplace practices to  limit the possibility of asbestos being brought home in this way. Some  employees may be required to shower and change their clothes before they  leave work, store their street clothes in a separate area of the  workplace, or wash their work clothes at home separately from other  clothes.
Cases of mesothelioma have also been seen in individuals  without occupational asbestos exposure who live close to asbestos mines.
Who is at risk for an asbestos-related disease?
Posted by kaniamazdar | 18:11 | asbestos exposure, who is at risk | 0 comments »
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