Asbestos has the properties of being both
malleable and heat-resistant, making it excellent for a number of uses.
The fibers can be spun and woven into thread or cloth, and writings from
the ancient Romans tell of it being woven into candlewicks so that
lamps could burn with an inexhaustible flame. Pliny the Elder also
observed the high rate of lung disease and death for people who mined
the asbestos or wove it into cloth.
In the modern era, asbestos was commonly
added to insulation for pipes and boilers, to drywall and joint
compound, to gaskets and packing for valves and pumps, to fireproofing
spray in buildings, to cement, to brake linings, to vinyl linoleum, and
to other products used in construction of buildings. It has excellent
filtering properties and has been used in various different liquid and
air filters. Asbestos has been used in making molds for dental crowns.
Appliances (including televisions, stoves, and hair dryers) and other
electrical equipment used asbestos paper to insulate hot areas or
asbestos insulation to protect the wires. Asbestos cloth has been used
to make “fireproof” curtains for theaters and clothing for firefighters,
and to protect welders from sparks. The miners of the asbestos fibers
and the people in the factories who manufactured the
asbestos-containing products may have been the most heavily exposed of
all workers, but they were not the only ones.
One of the widest uses of asbestos was in
insulation aboard ships. Asbestos parts were used not only as components
in the ship’s machinery, such as in packing for the pumps or firebrick
materials for the boilers, but also to cover the steam lines throughout
the ship. Steamlines ran throughout eating and sleeping quarters and
other work spaces aboard ships, so even persons who never went into the
machinery rooms were exposed to asbestos from the insulated pipes. There
are many anecdotes of military seamen being in their bunk when the guns
were fired on the ship; the shaking from the guns caused dust to fall
on the sailors from the insulated steamlines. The states with the
highest rates of malignant mesothelioma or other asbestos-related
diseases are the states where shipbuilding and ship repair were large
industries during and after World War II.
Another significant source of exposure to
asbestos is schools. Because of concerns about keeping children safe
from fires, asbestos materials were frequently used in the construction
of schools. Students and teachers were then exposed when later
construction or remodeling disturbed the existing asbestos materials.
Further, asbestos fibers do not disappear or disintegrate on their own,
and they are recirculated through movement and activity. Once asbestos
is in the air in a closed environment, it is difficult to remove it.
A third prominent areas in which asbestos
products have been used is in construction and remodeling, including
work on residential and commercial buildings. Persons working in
construction are frequently exposed to asbestos through the activities
of other tradespeople performing work in the same area. For example, if a
drywaller sands downs the area where he has applied joint compound that
contained asbestos, the asbestos fibers in the joint compound are
released into the air and can be inhaled by a carpenter working with
just wood and nails in the same vicinity. Sheet metal workers might
scrape off fireproofing spray previously applied to a girder in order to
do their own work, and thereby disturb the asbestos fibers in the
fireproofing.
Another group of people frequently exposed to asbestos products
are those worked in the maintenance mechanic trade and related
occupations, such as millwrights or machinists. They are exposed through
removal of insulation surrounding pumps or boilers, through removal of
gaskets and valve packing in the pumps or machinery, and through the
insulation on the steam lines coming from the boilers. Again, if a team
of insulators or pipe-fitters comes in to do repairs to a damaged line
and removes asbestos-containing insulation from the pipes, the people
responsible for maintaining the machinery would be exposed to asbestos
fibers through that work as well as through their own.
Asbestos has also been commonly used
in brake shoes and lining (for automobiles but also for locomotives and
for clutches on other machinery). Although it is commonly believed that
asbestos was made illegal in the late 1970’s, many uses are still legal
in the United States. A NIOSH study in 1989 stated that asbestos was
still a component in a majority of brakes. The study estimated that
155,000 mechanics and automotive garage workers could be potentially
exposed to asbestos contained in brakes. Asbestos brake pads have not
been banned by the EPA, nor has the import of asbestos-containing
materials from some of the other countries that continue to manufacture
them. Exposure to asbestos friction materials still presents a hazard to
mechanics working in the present day.
While exposure to asbestos is primarily an
occupational hazard, asbestos did not stay out of the home. People have
been exposed to asbestos through any repair or remodeling work done on
their home, and disclosure of asbestos materials is still required when
selling a house. The families of people who worked in trades where they
were exposed to asbestos were also frequently exposed through contact
with the worker. Children hugged their father when he came home from
work and breathed in the asbestos dust on his clothing. Women shook out
and washed their husband’s dirty work clothes daily. Shipyard workers
and insulators would bring home pieces of asbestos cloth, valued in the
home for its absorbency and softness. Asbestos fibers remained in the
worker’s car. Illustrating the unpredictability of asbestos-related
diseases, sometimes the person who worked with the asbestos products
never develops a serious illness while a family member contracts
malignant mesothelioma.






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