Asbestosis disease is a serious breathing disorder caused by inhaling asbestos fibers. To ensure asbestosis compensation, it is recommended that you get help from an experienced asbestosis lawyer, who will file your complaint against all your employers and the companies that may have caused asbestos exposure.
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Asbestosis
Asbestosis is life-threatening because it can lead to asbestosis lung cancer and mesothelioma, which is incurable. If you have been exposed to asbestos and think you have an asbestos claim, a number of states accept asbestos lawsuits filed by people who reasonably expect to develop asbestos-related illnesses. People with occupational asbestos-related diseases also may qualify for financial help, including medical payments, under state worker's compensation laws. Whichever route you take, sifting through complex asbestosis legal issues requires an experienced asbestosis attorney. Also, a qualified asbestos lawyer typically goes after 20-30 companies and manufacturers per claim to help you and your family obtain asbestosis compensation.
What is Asbestosis?
Asbestosis develops over time as asbestos fibers begin to cause inflammation in the lungs, which leads to the development of scar tissue (fibrosis). The most common symptom of asbestosis is shortness of breath, or a feeling of breathlessness. Asbestosis disease causes scarring of the parenchymal tissue of the lung; it decreases the lung's ability to exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood through a reduction in total lung capacity. Asbestosis can lead to disability and death.
Additional symptoms of asbestosis can include:
Chronic cough
Decreased tolerance for physical activity
Finger clubbing: finger tip enlargement; round or club-like shaping of the fingers
Chronic chest pain (associated with fluid buildup)
Congestive heart failure
Asbestos disease falls into two basic categories:
Cancerous: Some diseases are malignant (or cancerous), such as mesothelioma and lung cancer.
Non-Cancerous: Others are benign (non-malignant or non-cancerous), such as asbestosis, pleural plaques, diffuse pleural fibrosis, and benign pleural effusions.
Asbestosis often exists without any symptoms and is only found by x-rays and CT scans that show scarring and thickening of lung tissue. Although asbestosis is not as serious as mesothelioma, it is still life-threatening and incurable.
Asbestosis and Lung Cancer
The association between lung cancer and asbestosis is not yet determined. Some experts believe there is a threshold for lung cancer based on the assumption of the carcinogenic process being an extension of the chronic inflammatory processes producing fibrosis. Evidence has shown that heavy doses of white asbestos are required to produce clinically significant lung fibrosis but the potential damage for blue and brown asbestos is still uncertain, but fibrosis has been observed in blue and brown asbestos at much lower exposures. These observations suggest that if a threshold for lung cancer does exist for blue and brown asbestos it must be at a very low level.
Who is at Risk for Asbestos-Related Disease?
Millions of Americans have been exposed to asbestos fibers, mainly from the work environment but cases of asbestosis and mesothelioma have been found in people without occupational asbestos exposure. Workers carried asbestos fibers home on their clothes, exposing family members, and people who lived near asbestos mines have developed asbestosis and mesothelioma. There are approximately 3,000 people diagnosed with asbestos-related diseases every year. Those most at risk include workers in construction, shipyards and other building trades; vehicle mechanics and electricians.
Typically, people who develop asbestos-related diseases show no signs of illness after their first exposure. According to the National Cancer Institute, it can take from 10 to 40 years or more for symptoms of asbestos disease to appear. Due to this length of time, asbestosis is often not diagnosed.
People who become ill from asbestos are usually exposed to it on a regular basis, but others, such as those who worked in the rescue, recovery, and cleanup at the site of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center (WTC) are also at risk. Residents and schoolchildren nearby could also suffer respiratory problems, which can lead to asbestosis. One study found that nearly 70 percent of WTC rescue and recovery workers suffered new or worsened respiratory symptoms while working at the WTC site.
Asbestosis Lawsuit
An asbestosis lawsuit can help you recover the cost of medical bills, lost wages and other costs. Some lawsuits also award punitive damages, which punishes the defendant. If you have an asbestosis claim, you can also include your family or loved ones. Those targeted in asbestos lawsuits include:
Asbestos manufacturers
Asbestos installers
Employers: including contractors whose workers used asbestos products; the general contractor (the company or person in charge of construction and safety at a building site); and/or the owner(s) of the sites where exposure occurred.
Landlords
Leasing agents
Asbestosis attorneys will first determine who was responsible for the asbestos exposure at different places and at different times by obtaining relevant information about your work history, medical reports, co-worker interviews, etc. They will find out who was responsible for your asbestos exposure, from employers to manufacturers. Keep in mind that the statute of limitations varies from state to state. Your attorney can advise you—so better to act sooner than later.
Asbestosis Lung Disease Legal Help
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Alexandria, VA: Rosemary knows it is way too late to file an asbestosis claim—her father died from asbestosis back in 1961. "Maybe I can help someone who is sad about losing their father to asbestos, I want them to know they aren't alone," she says. [READ MORE]
Grants, NM: The propensity for asbestosis symptoms to appear decades after exposure speaks to the reality for the filing of an asbestosis lawsuit years after that initial exposure—and in some cases, even after the plaintiff has passed away from asbestos exposure. [READ MORE]
Perryville, MD: When Sophia saw a television announcement about the secondhand risks of asbestosis exposure, she was understandably concerned. Her father worked at the Bethlehem steel shipyards and was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a disease that is only caused by asbestos exposure [READ MORE]