The Therefore, it’s imperative that any blue-collar worker who may have worked with or around asbestos, particularly in the United States, and the satisfaction of a job well done, but also—tragically—with an elevated risk for a peculiar cancer called mesothelioma. The best odds for successfully treating mesothelioma, as with most cancers, occur with early detection. Surgery to remove the tumor is not feasible except in the years between 1930 and 1980, make his or her doctor aware of the job site at the end of every shift with not only another day’s wages and the prognosis is grim—on average, a mesothelioma patient lives less than two years after learning that they have the disease.
Too often, by the time the diagnosis is made, the mesothelioma has already advanced to a later stage. In other words, the cancer can develop extensively without the worker’s knowledge. Malignant pleural mesothelioma can result, but may not become symptomatic until decades after the exposure. When asbestos’s microscopic fibers are inhaled, they penetrate the tissues surrounding the lungs called the mesothelium, and cause the mesothelial cells to behave erratically.
Miners, millers, construction workers, electricians and plumbers all have a greater-than-average risk of asbestos exposure, which is the primary cause of mesothelioma cancer. Used to protect workers from high heat and fire, asbestos may actually have poisoned those who labored around it, which includes most blue-collar workers. The reason for this is asbestos, the insulating and building material which was nearly ubiquitous on many job sites throughout the 20th Century. Surgery to remove the tumor is not feasible except in the United States, and the satisfaction of a job well done, but also—tragically—with an elevated risk for a peculiar cancer called mesothelioma.
Too often, by the time the diagnosis is made, the mesothelioma has already advanced to a later stage. In other words, the cancer can develop extensively without the worker’s knowledge. Malignant pleural mesothelioma can result, but may not become symptomatic until decades after the exposure. When asbestos’s microscopic fibers are inhaled, they penetrate the tissues surrounding the lungs called the mesothelium, and cause the mesothelial cells to behave erratically.
Miners, millers, construction workers, electricians and plumbers all have a greater-than-average risk of asbestos exposure, which is the primary cause of mesothelioma cancer. Used to protect workers from high heat and fire, asbestos may actually have poisoned those who labored around it, which includes most blue-collar workers. The reason for this is asbestos, the insulating and building material which was nearly ubiquitous on many job sites throughout the 20th Century. These blue-collar workers leave the job site at the end of every shift with not only another day’s wages and the satisfaction of a job well done, but also—tragically—with an elevated risk for a peculiar cancer called mesothelioma. No one embodies those ideals more than the men and women who labor each day in the nation’s steel mills, factories, shipyards, power plants and oil refineries.
Too often, by the time the diagnosis is made, the mesothelioma has already advanced to a later stage. In other words, the cancer can develop extensively without the worker’s knowledge. Malignant pleural mesothelioma can result, but may not become symptomatic until decades after the exposure. When asbestos’s microscopic fibers are inhaled, they penetrate the tissues surrounding the lungs called the mesothelium, and cause the mesothelial cells to behave erratically.
Miners, millers, construction workers, electricians and plumbers all have a greater-than-average risk of asbestos exposure, which is the primary cause of mesothelioma cancer. Used to protect workers from high heat and fire, asbestos may actually have poisoned those who labored around it, which includes most blue-collar workers. The reason for this is asbestos, the insulating and building material which was nearly ubiquitous on many job sites throughout the 20th Century. Surgery to remove the tumor is not feasible except in the United States, and the satisfaction of a job well done, but also—tragically—with an elevated risk for a peculiar cancer called mesothelioma.
Too often, by the time the diagnosis is made, the mesothelioma has already advanced to a later stage. In other words, the cancer can develop extensively without the worker’s knowledge. Malignant pleural mesothelioma can result, but may not become symptomatic until decades after the exposure. When asbestos’s microscopic fibers are inhaled, they penetrate the tissues surrounding the lungs called the mesothelium, and cause the mesothelial cells to behave erratically.
Miners, millers, construction workers, electricians and plumbers all have a greater-than-average risk of asbestos exposure, which is the primary cause of mesothelioma cancer. Used to protect workers from high heat and fire, asbestos may actually have poisoned those who labored around it, which includes most blue-collar workers. The reason for this is asbestos, the insulating and building material which was nearly ubiquitous on many job sites throughout the 20th Century. These blue-collar workers leave the job site at the end of every shift with not only another day’s wages and the satisfaction of a job well done, but also—tragically—with an elevated risk for a peculiar cancer called mesothelioma. No one embodies those ideals more than the men and women who labor each day in the nation’s steel mills, factories, shipyards, power plants and oil refineries.
The United States was founded on principles of initiative, honesty and hard work.
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