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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Outrageous misconduct - such as the asbestos industry employees about the deadly products deceived

In the early 20th century, asbestos became a widely used industrial product, was held in isolation in shipbuilding, boilers, as brake pad and fire resistant as a reinforcing material in concrete, water and waste water, insulation boards, floor tiles and wall coverings, wallboard, ceilings tiles and gas masks, plant and equipment. 1918 No longer the prudential insurance company life insurance sale to asbestos workers because of the "harmful health conditions of the industry".
Management knew of the 1920s in U.S. asbestos mining and processing companies and production companies that used asbestos this threat through its fibers presents major health hazards for the workers. However, these companies did not say their workers about the health risks, yet have they provide adequate ventilation, masks or other safety equipment, which could have reduced their risk.
The US Bureau of mines was aware of the problem also. Paul Brodeur cover-up asbestos cited in outrageous misconduct, his pioneering exposé industry a letter from an official in1933 Bureau of mines at Eagle picher, an asbestos manufacturer, which stated that "it is now known that asbestos dust is one of the most dangerous dusts to which man is exposed to."
Asbestos companies continue to exist, that there was no connection between the use of asbestos and the high rates of asbestosis and lung cancer mesothelioma found in workers exposed to asbestos. In 1933, 29 percent of the employees a Johns-Manville plant had asbestosis. Eleven employees brought them against the company for its failure to notify the risk and error prevention or harm-reduction measures. Johns Manville these lawsuits, writing in the terms of the settlement that the staff never again directly or indirectly might participate lawyer to take new measures against the company. This request indicates that Johns Manville clearly understood his own liability and their contribution to the illness and death of its employees.
During the second WELTKRIEGS naval shipyards on both coasts used many thousands of workers. At the peak, 1,337,000 employees in crafts, writing, and management and engineering in the construction and repair of the country occupied military and commercial fleets U.S. shipyards and their suppliers. Asbestos products were used in this work extensively. Shipyard workers worked often in closed, unventilated spaces, where the concentration of airborne asbestos particles was so high that the air was white. Supplier of asbestos products and shipyard owner made no disclosure of this patriotic in the workforce of the deadly risks faced they handle asbestos.
A decade later Dr. Irving Selikoff New York's Mt. Sinai School of medicine grew increasingly worried about the unusual incidence of cases of lung cancer and mesothelioma in asbestos workers. White embarked on a far-reaching investigation of the health of all 1117 members of New York and New Jersey local of the International Association of heat and Frost Insulators and asbestos workers.
He found evidence of asbestosis in more than half of them. The longer the exposure to asbestos, the greater probability of a worker's cancer is developed. He also showed that mortality among asbestos workers was 25% higher than expected. His ground-breaking study, published in 1964 established irrefutably the dangers of the risks related to asbestos.
After the release of the study the Selikoff was neither the companies nor their employees experts reasonably continue to claim ignorance of the dangers. The way was now open for plaintiffs lawyers to product-liability suits for terminally ill asbestos workers against the manufacturers of asbestos products file.

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