Occupational
Exposure to asbestos fibres has been recognised as
an occupational health hazard since the early 1900s. Several
epidemiological studies have associated exposure to asbestos with
the development of lesions such as asbestos bodies in the sputum,
pleural plaques, diffuse pleural thickening, asbestosis, carcinoma
of the lung and larynx, gastrointestinal tumours, and diffuse
mesothelioma of the pleura and peritoneum.
The documented presence of asbestos fibres in water
supplies and food products has fostered concerns about the possible
impact of long-term and, as yet, unknown exposure of the general
population to these fibres. Although many authorities consider
brief or transient exposure to asbestos fibres as inconsequential
and an unlikely risk factor, some epidemiologists claim that there
is no risk threshold. Cases of mesothelioma have been found in
people whose only exposure was breathing the air through
ventilation systems. Other cases had very minimal (3 months or
less) direct exposure.
Commercial asbestos mining at Wittenoom, Western
Australia, occurred between 1945 and 1966. A cohort study of miners
employed at the mine reported that while no deaths occurred within
the first 10 years after crocidolite exposure, 85 deaths
attributable to mesothelioma had occurred by 1985. By 1994, 539
reported deaths due to mesothelioma had been reported in Western
Australia.
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