Exposure
Asbestos was known in antiquity, but it wasn't
mined and widely used commercially until the late 1800s. Its use
greatly increased during World War II. Since the early 1940s,
millions of American workers have been exposed to asbestos dust.
Initially, the risks associated with asbestos exposure were not
publicly known. However, an increased risk of developing
mesothelioma was later found among shipyard workers, people who
work in asbestos mines and mills, producers of asbestos products,
workers in the heating and construction industries, and other
tradespeople. Today, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) sets limits for acceptable levels of asbestos
exposure in the workplace, and created guidelines for engineering
controls and respirators, protective clothing, exposure monitoring,
hygiene facilities and practices, warning signs, labeling,
recordkeeping, and medical exams. By contrast, the British
Government's Health and Safety Executive (HSE) states formally that
any threshold for mesothelioma must be at a very low level and it
is widely agreed that if any such threshold does exist at all, then
it cannot currently be quantified. For practical purposes,
therefore, HSE does not assume that any such threshold exists.
People who work with asbestos wear personal protective equipment to
lower their risk of exposure.
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