Posts Tagged ‘Linda Reinstein’

ADAO provides a voice for workers at ‘OSHA Listens’ hearing

15 Mar 2010 by Wendi Lewis under News

oshalistens banner2 ADAO provides a voice for workers at OSHA Listens hearingLinda Reinstein, co-founder of the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO) recently had the opportunity to participate on a panel discussion as part of an Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) public meeting. The event, held March 4 and called “OSHA Listens” was designed to solicit comments and suggestions from OSHA stakeholders on key issues facing the agency. As a representative of ADAO, Ms. Reinstein was able to address OSHA leaders about the urgency and importance of a complete ban on . The meeting was held in , D.C.

The program was designed to help OSHA learn about key areas that will enhance and encourage the efforts of employers, workers and unions to identify and address workplace hazards. The agency asked for feedback about emerging unaddressed health and safety issues, how to improve efforts to engage stakeholder in program and initiatives, and for help in identifying priorities.

Ms. Reinstein, who lost her husband Alan to in 2004 as a result of his exposure to in the workplace, was joined on the panel by others who had lost loved ones to workplace hazards. Overseeing the panel discussion was David Michaels, Assistant Secretary, OSHA; and Deborah Berkowitz, Chief of Staff, OSHA.

“ADAO urges OSHA to move from helping to control to preventing asbestos exposure, and we urge you to help disseminate other government agencies’ information … to increase awareness and support for best practices and encourage compliance,” Reinstein told the panel. She pointed out that OSHA’s own web site estimates 1.3 million employees in construction and general labor have faced “significant exposure.”

Reinstein also took the opportunity to ask OSHA’s leaders to support pending legislation that calls for a complete ban of in the U.S.

“Clearly, one life lost to disease is tragic, but hundreds of thousands of lives lost is unconscionable,” she said. “OSHA has the opportunity – and the responsibility – to protect Americans from these preventable diseases. We count on you to push this forward, and we would encourage and ask that Secretary (of Labor Hilda L.) Solis support asbestos ban legislation to prevent -caused diseases to protect workers and their families on behalf of the tens of thousands who have lost their life.”

Transcripts of the meeting are available on the OSHA web site.

A web cast of the meeting, including Panel 1, which features Ms. Reinstein, also is available by visiting OSHA online.


ADAO praises senate for asbestos awareness resolution

5 Mar 2010 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations

adao logoThis week the Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO) praised Senate leaders for a resolution that declares the first week of April 2010 as “National Awareness Week.” This is the sixth year in a row that the ADAO has been active in working with Senate leaders to secure a national resolution in recognition of the dangers of .

The resolution is sponsored by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.). Co-sponsors and key supporters are Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.).

A news release from the ADAO quotes the organization’s Co-Founder and Executive Director Linda Reinstein as saying, “We are grateful to the U.S. Senate to have the opportunity to help raise the level of public awareness about the prolific dangers of and further unite doctors, scientists, and public health advocates during National Awareness Week for this important effort. During the past six years, ADAO has seen the progress and indeed, this confirms what Americans deserve and want. We know prevention and education will save lives and dollars.”

The ADAO was founded by victims and their families in 2004. It seeks to give victims and concerned citizens a united voice to raise public awareness about the dangers of asbestos exposure. ADAO’s mission includes supporting global advocacy and advancing awareness, prevention, early detection, treatment, and resources for -related disease.

is a known human carcinogen and exposure can cause -related diseases, including , and . According to the ADAO news release, studies estimate that during the next decade 100,000 workers around the world will die of an -related disease. This equals 30 deaths per day.

The ADAO annually holds a conference in conjunction with National Awareness Week. The Sixth Annual International Conference is set for April 10, 2010, in Chicago, Ill.

For more information about ADAO or for conference registration, visit ADAO online at www.asbestosdiseaseawareness.org.


Registration now open for ADAO Sixth Annual International Asbestos Awareness Conference

2 Dec 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations

adao logoThe Disease Awareness Organization has announced registration is now open for its Sixth Annual International Awareness Conference. The conference is scheduled for April 9-11, 2010 in Chicago, Ill. This annual event brings together renowned doctors, scientists, researchers and victims and their families in a united forum for awareness, education and collaboration. Each year the event coincides with national Awareness Day, April 1.

In addition to providing educational information, advocacy support, a special remembrance ceremony and networking opportunities, each year the conference honors individuals or organizations that have demonstrated outstanding work and dedication to awareness related activities. ADAO has announced this year’s honorees:

  • The Honorable Richard Durbin, United States Senator – Tribute of Hope Award
  • Dr. Hedy Kindler – Selikoff Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Center for Related Disease (CARD), Libby, Montana – Tribute of Unity Award
  • Fernanda Giannasi – Tribute of Inspiration Award
  • June Breit (posthumous) – The Alan Reinstein Memorial Award

At the conference, the ADAO also will announce the recipient of the Warren Zevon “Keep Me in Your Heart” Memorial Tribute.

“I’ve received countless requests for my father’s song, ‘Keep Me in Your Heart,’ to be used at memorials for victims,” said ADAO Spokesperson Jordan Zevon. Jordan is the son of Warren Zevon, acclaimed singer and songwriter, who died of in 2003. “You can imagine how proud it makes me to know that my father’s Grammy winning song has touched so many families, but it is bittersweet because of the nature of those requests. In his honor, I will continue to work with ADAO to ban asbestos to spare future generations from the same fate.”

“As we get closer to a full asbestos ban, we are encouraged, yet simultaneously reminded that the reverberations of asbestos exposure can last decades,” said Linda Reinstein, Co-Founder and Executive Director of ADAO. “Our annual conferences drive home the importance of the need for increased awareness, education and research.”

Additional conference details are available on the ADAO web site, and online registration is available at http://www.adao.eventbrite.com.

The International Awareness Conference is made possible with the support and collaborative efforts of the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute and the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS).


ADPH calls for ban on asbestos, warnings for workers

12 Nov 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations

ADPH logoIn a news release yesterday the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO) applauded a recent decision by the American Public Health Association (APHA) to strengthen its policy against . The APHA has adopted a resolution calling on Congress to ban the manufacture, sale, export or import of containing products. ADAO co-founder Linda Reinstein says she hopes this is one more step forward in finally securing a total ban of in the United States.

According to its web site, the ADPH is the largest, oldest and most diverse organization of public health professionals in the world, and has been working to improve public health since 1872. The association “aims to protect all Americans and their communities from preventable, serious health threats and strives to assure community-based health promotion and disease prevention activities and preventive health services are universally accessible in the United States.”

“We can’t let history repeat itself,” Reinstein said in the news release. “APHA renews our optimism that a federal asbestos ban is imminent.”

The APHA resolution for the elimination of includes a brief history of the known links between and adverse health effects, including malignant respiratory disease, including , lung and other cancers, specifically . It also states that the organization opposes legislation that would limit the right of victims of disease to recover damages from manufacturers, and supports the Bruce Vento Ban Asbestos and Prevent Act of 2008.

In order to strengthen its stance on , the resolution not only calls for the complete ban on the manufacture, sale, export or import of -containing products, but also recommends the U.S. Congress should direct research funding to identify public health hazards resulting from mining or excavation of minerals that occur naturally with . It urges the U.S. Surgeon General to warn and educate people annually about the public health issues related to asbestos exposure (building on a similar warning issued in April this year) and to “disseminate widely and annually its warning to all federal and state health, consumer, labor and environmental protection agencies.”

The resolution also recommends that the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issue an annual statement to alert workers in high-risk occupations to the dangers and adverse health risks associated with .

Other recommendations address testing existing structures for the presence of , and asking the government to take a harder stance against manufacturing, sale and exportation by other nations, as well as by corporations, calling for a global ban on .

The ADAO news release quotes Celeste Monforton, DrPH, MPH, who is Chair of the ADPH Occupational Health and Safety section, as saying, “With this new policy, the ADPH is joining the World Federation of Public Health Associations and other international organizations calling for a global ban on mining and manufacturing, and the dangerous practice of exporting containing products.”

Read the ADAO News Release.

Read the full APHA Resolution.


Video shows effects of asbestos in the lungs

9 Nov 2009 by Wendi Lewis under News

A video that demonstrates the effects of in the lungs was recently brought to my attention by two sources. Our friend Debbie Brewer posted it to her Facebook, and then Linda Reinstein from the Disease Awareness Organization sent me a link, which I’m planning to post on my Twitter feed. This is one of the best dramatizations I’ve seen yet about how fibers enter the lungs, and how they can cause such conditions as , pleural plaques, and .

If you have a Twitter account and would like to share this video, please re-Tweet @ Linda_ADAO Excellent 90 second video on fiber inhalation produced by ANROAV, AMRC and A-BAN http://tinyurl.com/yhqsdzd


California asked to find non-lethal official state rock

22 Oct 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations

serpentine rockA story on the Cold Truth web site published Oct. 21 reported on a recent meeting of the Manhattan Beach, Calif., City Council, during which it passed a resolution to ask the State of California to find a new “official state rock.” The state’s current stone is serpentine, which usually contains . is a known carcinogen that causes the deadly cancer , which affects the lining of the lungs, stomach and/or heart, as well as other deadly diseases including , a severe scarring of the lungs.

Cold Truth is an original investigative journalism reporting site created by Pulitzer Prize winning reporter Andrew Schneider, who broke the story of the poisoning of Libby, Montana, among others. According to his report, serpentine was chosen as the state rock of California in 1965, “in order to promote the then-lucrative mining industry.”

The proposal to ask California’s government to change the official state rock was presented and supported by the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), which is headquartered in California. The organization has dubbed the effort the “Drop the Rock” Campaign, and urges statewide action while building awareness about cancer-causing .

According to a news release from ADAO dated Oct. 21, Resolution 6223 is “Urging the State Legislature to repeal the designation of serpentine, the host of , as the official state rock, in support of world eradication of for public health as urged by the Disease Awareness Organization.”

The resolution from Manhattan Beach represents the first official request to the California legislature to remove the rock. ADAO notes that Chrysotile , which is often found in serpentine, causes cancers and respiratory diseases such as , and .

“California has the dubious distinction of being the state with the highest recorded number of -related deaths and the death toll will continue until the United States Congress passes legislation banning ,” said ADAO Executive Director and Co-Founder Linda Reinstein in the news release. “We have a strategic plan in place and look forward to working with victims and their families, the John McNamara Foundation, the Pacific Heart, Lung & Blood Institute, and political leaders as we move throughout California to repeal serpentine as the state rock.”

The ADAO news release quotes Manhattan Beach Mayor Portia Cohen as saying, “It is unthinkable to have Serpentine as the State Rock of California when more than 7,000 people in our state alone have died from since 2007.”

Read Resolution 6223.


ADAO founder draws from personal loss to fight asbestos disease, raise awareness

20 Oct 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations, People

Reinsteins 100x100 ADAO founder draws from personal loss to fight asbestos disease, raise awareness“For every life lost to , a shattered family is left behind.” This is the motto and the message of the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO) co-founder Linda Reinstein. Linda, who now serves as ADAO’s executive director, became an activist on behalf of the victims of disease in 2003, when her husband Alan was diagnosed with . He passed away in May 2006.

The Disease Awareness Organization, which Linda established in 2004 along with co-founder Doug Larkin,  is a non-profit organization dedicated to serving as the voice for all victims. Its mission includes education, outreach, networking for victims, and especially working to accomplish a complete ban of in the United States. ADAO has gotten a U.S. Senate resolution to officially declare April 1 as Awareness Day, and hosts an annual Awareness Day Conference to increase awareness and help prevent future exposure.

This year, the Acting Surgeon General Steven K. Galson supported National Awareness Week, the first week of April, and issued a statement about the deadly health hazard posed by .

Since co-founding ADAO, Linda has globally united countless individuals and families who have been affected by related diseases, including and . She also has worked to produce awareness materials including a slide show called “ Kills,” and other educational materials including an internationally distributed online book, “Reflections,” which features articles from renowned global experts.

Last week, the ADAO launched a new resource center page on its web site, and issued a call to action for those of us in the community to push for a complete ban on in the United States by contacting our Congressional representatives.

There is an easy way to do it – just visit www.banasbestos.us and click on the link that says “Write Your Congressman,” which is on the home page. This will take you to a form you can fill out, and it will automatically send the message to your Congressional delegates. Remember, YOU shoud be THEIR voice on Capitol Hill!

“I need them to feel our pain,” Reinstein said. “ victims – patients, families, caregivers -  are turning their anger to action, across the nation, working for the difference we can make, together.”

Pictured above, Linda Reinstein with her and Alan’s daughter Emily. The flag is in recognition of Alan’s military service to his country.