- ATLANTA (Reuters) -- Deaths
from asbestos exposure have surged in the United States and are set to
keep rising in the next decade as more workers succumb to the lung disease
caused by the industrial mineral, federal health experts warned on Thursday.
-
- The number of Americans who died of asbestosis, which
is caused by inhalation of asbestos particles, jumped to 1,493 in 2000
from 77 in 1968, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
-
- The incurable disease, marked by shortness of breath
and persistent cough and linked to a higher risk of cancer, is now a bigger
killer than silicosis and black lung and the deadliest of all work-related
respiratory illnesses.
-
- The Atlanta-based CDC warned that the death toll would
likely continue rising because of the lag -- often as much as 45 years
-- between initial exposure to asbestos fibers and death.
-
- "What we're dealing with is a legacy of the past,"
said Michael Attfield, an epidemiologist in the CDC's National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health and one of the study's authors.
-
- Prized for its heat-resistant and insulation properties,
asbestos was mined for use in U.S. shipyards and construction sites after
World War II. Its use declined sharply in the 1980s after warnings about
health risks.
-
- Attfield said that asbestos-tainted materials were still
in some factories, workplaces and other buildings across the nation, posing
a continued risk of exposure to occupants.
-
- Coastal states such as Alaska, Washington, Mississippi,
Virginia, Massachusetts and Maine were among those with the highest rates
of asbestosis mortality between 1982 and 2000, according to the CDC study,
which analyzed data from death certificates.
-
- The rise in asbestosis deaths has occurred amid a decline
in mortality from other occupational lung diseases such as coal workers'
pneumoconiosis, or black lung, and silicosis.
-
- The death rate from silicosis and other unspecified pneumoconiosis
was 70 percent lower in men between 1982 and 2000 than in the 1968-1981
period. Male mortality due to black lung fell 36 percent over the same
time periods.
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