Tuesday 17 February 2009

"Amazing Asbestos" By Keasbey & Mattison
Stone that turns to floss
Though Asbestos is Rock, When mined once broken
it can be pulled apart... Actually makes a fleece
as soft and light as a wisp of wool...

This ad from the 1950s proclaims the miracle properties of asbestos, but it was identified as a serious health hazard in the 1920s ...


Spodden Valley Asbestos Scandal

Asbestos Promotional Video 1950's

World's First Asbestos Research Centre Opens

Sydney, Australia
On January 20, 2009 Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd presided over the opening dedication of the Bernie Banton Asbestos Diseases Research Institute (BBADRI). Located on the grounds of Sydney's Concord Hospital, the $12 million facility is the world's largest stand alone institute dedicated entirely to the advancement of scientific investigations into asbestos-caused malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM), an aggressive, deadly, and incurable form of lung cancer. Public and private donation funded, the BBADRI will be partially staffed by physicians and researchers from Concord Hospital.
Named for a man who is considered to be a true Australian hero, the BBADRI celebrates the life of Bernie Banton, a man who had worked for years for James Hardie, a worldwide manufacturer and distributor of asbestos containing cementitious building supplies and other products. While at Hardie, Bernie's job exposed him, as well as thousands of other workers, to high levels of asbestos over a period of many years.
Bernie Banton died in 2007, his name added to a list of thousands of Australian workers who have succumbed to MPM, but, before Bernie died, he fought a heroic battle against Hardie on the behalf of all the workers that had been sickened by Hardie's failure to protect its employees from the well-known hazards of asbestos. Mr. Banton's courageous and tireless efforts eventually resulted in a staggering $4 billion dollar worker compensation package from Hardie.
At the asbestos center's opening ceremonies, after praising Bernie Banton's battle against the manufacturing giant, Prime Minister Rudd pledged $5 million to the state-of-the-art facility that will conduct bench (laboratory) and clinical (patient-involved) research programs designed to better understand asbestos-caused MPM while developing novel therapies to treat it.
The Dutch head of the BBADRI, Professor Nico van Zandwijk is a thoracic oncology specialist who reports that the new asbestos center is the result of a group of forward-thinking Australians who recognized the need for such a facility several years ago. "We aim to study specific pathways to disease and relate them to prognosis and treatment," said Zandwijk, who went on to state, "We will also concentrate on education and prevention, and work on plans to ensure that the affected victim receives optimal treatment. Ultimately, the aim will be to find new ways to treat a disease that is largely resistant to most forms of traditional therapy."
As a relevant note, while it was PM Rudd who officially dedicated the Sydney cancer center, the politician has recently come under fire from the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), a worker organization that accuses the Australian government of serious failures in enforcing a nationwide ban on asbestos. The ACTU, as well as five its major unions, recently sent a letter to PM Rudd, wherein it was stated that the government must establish an "asbestos task force" to investigate the thousands of daily exposures to asbestos that occur in Australia every day-many of those needlessly endangered by asbestos being Australian Navy and other military personnel. Sharan Burrow is the President of the ACTU, and she called PM Rudd's dedication of the BBADRI a "hollow gesture" by the government leader who has, to date, "failed to act to protect Australians from the very real dangers of exposure to asbestos."
At the dedication, PM Rudd stated, "Next year, around 750 Australians will be diagnosed with asbestos-related disease," and that "these are bad figures." Rudd went on to say that by 2020, Australia would be faced with over 13,000 cases of asbestos-caused mesothelioma. Bad figures, indeed, but Bernie Banton's cancer center will be there to help solve the mystery of this dreaded disease.

Wednesday 11 February 2009

Mesothelioma Awareness Day Friday 27th February 2009

This month sees the launch of the fourth annual Action Mesothelioma Day, which culminates on Friday 27th February 2009. During this time health charities, asbestos support groups, healthcare professionals, families and people living with mesothelioma will be campaigning to improve the treatment and care of people who are affected by the disease.

The British Lung Foundation will be publishing the results of our survey into the experiences and needs of people who have been affected by mesothelioma. We will also be campaigning for full implementation of the Mesothelioma Framework by publishing the result of our audit of NHS services and the degree to which they adhere to the standards that have been set the Department of Health.

The BLF will also be focusing on the forthcoming Coroners Bill and how it could work to improve the experience of those who have been bereaved by mesothelioma. The Bill is currently passing through Parliament and the reception is therefore an ideal opportunity to discuss with MPs how inquiries are carried out following a death from mesothelioma and how the Coroners Bill can ensure that coroner’s inquiries are carried out in a way that is sensitive to the needs of the bereaved.

You can support Action Mesothelioma Day 2009 by emailing your MP to ask them to support the campaign. To do so simply click here and enter your name and address.

There are also a range of Action Mesothelioma Day events taking place throughout the UK. To find out where an event is taking place near you please click here.

It only takes a few minutes to show your support and by getting this message to MPs you can make a real difference to the lives of those people with mesothelioma.

For more information about this campaign please email campaigning@blf-uk.org

Thursday 5 February 2009

Yang recieves MARF grant for Meso study


Research scientist , MD, PhD, has been selected to receive a two-year, $100,000 grant from the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF) to study the mechanism of how causes . She hopes the research will aid in the development of effective prevention and therapeutic interventions, according to a report in the Honolulu Advertiser. Yang is a scientist at the , in the Thoracic Oncology Program.
Yang was one of five recipients of the MARF grant, and was selected from among 59 applicants in an international competition. Her research project will include an early detection study of in targeted villages in that show a high incidence of the disease, the paper reports.
In addition to the MARF grant, Yang will recieve $120,000 from the Hawaii Community Foundation Leahi Fund that will help support her research.
According to the Honolulu Advertiser, people in Hawaii are familiar with because it often affects people who worked in the naval at , as a result of exposure to used in shipbuilding for years.
The Cancer Research Center of Hawaii is a reserach unit of the University of Hawaii. It was established as a freestanding independent institute in 1981. On July 1, 1996, the Center became a National Cancer Institute (NCI) designated center, and was awarded the Cancer Center Support Grant. The Center is located in Honolulu, Hawaii. Its mission is to “reduce the burden of cancer through research, education, and service with an emphasis on the unique ethnic, cultural and environmental characteristics of Hawaii and the Pacific.”
Related posts:
UH mesothelioma research recognized
CDC grant for possible Ground Zero illnesses
DoD funding for Meso research
DoD appropriations bill has meso funding request
National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank operational