Portsmouth News

Asbestos is linked to 488 deaths

MPs launch probe into handling as figures show scale of fatalities

- By DAVID GEORGE The News david.george@thenews.co.uk

CANCER linked to asbestos has claimed the lives of nearly 500 people in Portsmouth over almost four decades, new figures reveal.

MPs have launched an inquiry into how the material is being managed across the UK after serious safety concerns were raised.

Exposure to asbestos can lead to mesothelio­ma, a type of cancer which affects the lining of some organs, including the lungs.

Health and Safety Executive data shows the disease was responsibl­e for 488 deaths in Portsmouth between 1981 and 2019 – the latest available figures.

Of those, 68 occurred between 2015 and 2019 – eight more than in 2010-14.

The figures also show the mesothelio­ma death rate among men in Portsmouth – taking age difference­s into account – is higher than across Great Britain as a whole.

Liz Darlison, CEO of charity Mesothelio­ma UK, said: ‘Our country is riddled with the stuff and we have to address this if we want to protect future generation­s.

‘We need a long-term, government-led initiative to remove asbestos, even if it takes several generation­s.’

Dawn McKinley, chairman of the UK Mesothelio­ma Alliance, added: ‘Teachers, former pupils, school janitors, cleaners and canteen staff are dying from asbestos-related cancer and mesothelio­ma, and the numbers are increasing.

‘The dose level required to contract mesothelio­ma is extremely small.

‘Our politician­s, duty holders and decision makers must come together and use

their powers to protect our children from the real dangers they face from exposure to asbestos in our schools.’

The inquiry will examine the risks posed by asbestos in the workplace, the actions taken by the HSE to mitigate them and how its approach compares to those taken in other countries.

Though traditiona­lly, higher levels of asbestosre­lated illness were associated with work in industrial sites such as shipyards, in recent years that also expanded to other industries, including constructi­on.

A HSE spokesman said: ‘Sadly, the damage from exposure to asbestos takes many decades to show itself as there is often a latency of up to 40 years before disease is detectable.

‘Asbestos is, however, still present in older buildings given its previous uses and it must be managed appropriat­ely.’

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