Mesothelioma could kill 10% of Aussie carpenters

23 Apr 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News

carpenter.jpgA new study is predicting 10 percent of Australian carpenters born before 1950 will die of .

The Australian study, conducted by cancer specialist Professor Julian Peto, was based on into the lifetime occupations of 600 patients. Its findings were reported by the web site news.theage.com.au yesterday.

Peto predicts 30,000 Australians will die from between 2000 and 2050. He says the cause is exposure to both crocidolite (blue ) and amosite (brown ), which was used in building products in and until the 1980s.

According to the story on theage.com.au, Peto’s reveals that and the currently have the highest rates of in the world, with an estimated 600 cases per year in and 2,000 in , with numbers still rising.

Because I write this blog in the United States, I don’t talk as much about the looming global disaster poses. But it’s frightening, and it’s sickening, to see the effects of exposure just surfacing in communities around the world. I am afraid the coming suffering is unimaginable.

 

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