Did you work with asbestos?
LUNG cancer sufferers are missing out on substantial help, support and care because too often the link between asbestos and lung cancer is not being made.
Research has found a clear connection between high levels of asbestos dust exposure and the risk of lung cancer, but it can sometimes be difficult to attribute it to asbestos.
Diagnosing asbestosrelated lung cancer is further complicated where the patient is, or has been, a smoker, as this is often assumed to be the cause.
Smoking is, of course, the biggest cause of lung cancers. However, smokers who have also been exposed to high amounts of asbestos dust have a far greater risk of developing this condition.
The two toxins, tobacco and asbestos, work together to multiply the risk. The higher the concentration of asbestos dust, the higher the risk of lung cancer.
For example, in the UK more than 43,000 people a year are diagnosed with lung cancer. But the Health and Safety Executive estimates that deadly asbestos dust causes only 2,000 of the total recorded cases.
Legal experts believe the number of asbestos-related lung cancers is far higher than this and are calling on sufferers and health professionals to consider carefully whether asbestos is a potential cause.
For many tradesmen, manual workers and engineers, asbestos exposure in the workplace will have been inevitable during the past 60 years. Those who have worked as laggers, electricians, dockers, engineers, joiners, plumbers, welders, builders, fitters and heating engineers, or in any premises where asbestos was widely used (e.g. power stations, shipyards and railways) are likely to have come into contact with it.
It’s not just the responsibility of health professionals to consider asbestos as a cause in such cases.
A lung cancer patient should make their doctor aware if they believe they have been exposed to asbestos in the past.
The Wo r ld Health Organisation estimates that 107,000 people die every year as a result of occupational exposure to asbestos.
It is now implicated in many crippling, often fatal, lung diseases including mesothelioma, pleura l thickening, asbestosis and pulmonary fibrosis, as well as lung cancer.