Global Asbestos Awareness Week, April 1–7, displayed on a green background with a textured world map made to look like asbestos material. The logo "SWMW LAW" appears in the top right corner.
April 1, 2023

What You Should Know About Global Asbestos Awareness Week – SWMW Law | Mesothelioma & Asbestos Lawyers

Today marks the beginning of Global Asbestos Awareness Week, a campaign sponsored by the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO). Since 2004, individuals and organizations across the globe have been coming together to raise awareness about the dangers of asbestos and work to prevent asbestos exposure.

What You Should Know about Asbestos

Asbestos is an odorless, tasteless mineral fiber that occurs naturally in rock and soil and has been mined by hand for centuries. Once it was discovered that asbestos fibers could be mixed with other materials to add strength while being lightweight, inexpensive, and heat-resistant, asbestos use became widespread.

Between the 1950s and the 1980s, nearly every building across the U.S. was constructed using asbestos materials. It was used in bricks, sheetrock, siding, flooring, roofing, pipes, insulation, boilers, furnaces, and other building components. Asbestos was also widely used in automobile brakes, clutches, and transmission plates, and on the pipes of ships, factories, and nuclear plants.

How Asbestos Causes Chronic and Fatal Illnesses

How is asbestos dangerous to humans? When asbestos is mined, and when materials are installed or otherwise disturbed during cleaning, repair, or removal, millions of tiny asbestos fibers are released into the air. This happens, for example, when pipes are drilled or sawed, or when insulation or drywall is cut and nailed.

Asbestos fibers can land on workers’ skin and hair, and they can be inhaled or swallowed. Once inside the body, asbestos fibers can get lodged in the lungs, soft tissues, and other organs, causing lasting and often fatal damage.

Tragically, the risks of asbestos-related injury and disease are often spread to a worker’s family members when asbestos fibers travel home on a worker’s clothes, skin, hair, and belongings. Second-hand asbestos exposure can also happen to anyone working or passing through a site where asbestos was present.

Industries have known about these dangers since the 1930s. Asbestos lung cancer research and evidence have been known since the 1940s, and mesothelioma knowledge has been collected since the 1960s. However, due to corporate interests prevailing over workers’ safety, the government failed to enact a ban, putting families and workers at risk to this day.

Asbestos exposure can cause lung cancer (even in smokers), mesothelioma, esophageal cancer, colorectal cancer, and asbestos, which is the scarring of the lung tissue and chronic shortness of breath. Asbestos lung cancer and mesothelioma are aggressive forms of cancer that typically develop years after asbestos exposure.

Asbestos lung cancer appears as tumors inside the lung tissue, which restrict the flow of oxygen into the bloodstream, while mesothelioma develops on the lung’s outer lining, rigidly encasing the lung and causing painful, restricted breathing. Unfortunately, there are few treatment options for these types of cancers, and most people diagnosed with mesothelioma and asbestos lung cancer do not survive. Asbestos is the only external factor known to cause mesothelioma.

It can take anywhere between 15 and 50 years from first exposure to asbestos before symptoms of cancer or mesothelioma occur, and these symptoms can be mistaken for other common ailments. Individuals may initially experience shortness of breath, chest or lower back pain, chronic coughing, difficulty swallowing, and fluid around the lungs.

The theme for this year’s Global Asbestos Awareness Week is “Asbestos: One Word. One Week. One World.” The aim is unity among advocates and international nonprofits to make the week a success. And the focus will be on the following areas:

  • Banning the mining, manufacturing, and use of all six asbestos fibers around the world
  • Preventing asbestos exposure
  • Increasing compliance and enforcement of existing laws and regulations
  • Strengthening international partnerships to protect public health