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About
Asbestos
What is Asbestos?
asbestos
(1) A common form of magnesium silicate which was used in
various construction products. Asbestos exposure by inhaling loose
asbestos fibers is associated with various forms of lung
disease. (2) The name given to certain inorganic minerals when
they occur in fibrous form. Its
extremely fine fibers are easily inhaled, and exposure to them
has been linked to cancers of the lung
or lung-cavity lining and to mesothelioma.
There
are six types of asbestos - three of which have been used
commercially. These are white (chrysotile), blue (crocidolite)
and brown (amosite) asbestos. Over 90% of all asbestos ever
used was the white asbestos.
Asbestos is a mineral that was crushed and milled into a fine
particulate, and shipped to corporations for building and
insulation materials. Asbestos mines around the world, many in
Canada, produced over 250 million tons of asbestos for use in
the United States between 1890 and 1970. Asbestos was added to
a variety of products including insulation, automotive brakes,
fireproofing, pipe covering, cements, refractory materials,
gaskets, floor tiles and joint compounds. Click
here for a list of asbestos containing products.
During
the installation, repair, maintenance, renovation and removal
of asbestos materials, the products were cut, scraped, sanded
and otherwise altered. Some materials, such as cements, were
mixed at job sites using raw asbestos fibers. These processes
created dust, which was breathed in by the laborers working
with and around these materials. Dust from these products also
traveled throughout buildings and factories and ships, and
remained airborne for weeks. When swept, these materials were
re-suspended in the air -- where they were breathed in again
by workers in the vicinity.
The dangers of asbestos were known to the companies that made
these products as early as the 1920s. However, asbestos was
sold and used without warnings up until the 1980s -- when most
asbestos products were banned in the United States and other
countries. Alternative materials were available that could
have been used in place of asbestos.
A
wide array of workers were exposed to asbestos including
shipyard workers, factory workers, pipefitters, sheet metal
workers, plumbers, laborers, machinists, mechanics, powerhouse
workers, and electricians. One cloud of dust from asbestos
products can contain millions or billions of fibers, and even
a small amount of asbestos can cause lung damage. Mesothelioma
has been diagnosed in family members of workers exposed to
asbestos, learn
more.
Often, individuals won't recall how they were exposed to
asbestos, and may believe that they were not exposed to
asbestos at all. A careful examination and review of a
person's work and life history often reveals exposures to
asbestos products that may not be readily apparent.
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