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Emergency Response Workes and Asbestos Cancer Risks

Asbestos exposure is a risk for numerous professionals, including emergency response workers. Asbestos is often released into the air after a building is destroyed by fire, earthquake, tornado, hurricane, or other natural disaster, and these are events that typically warrant the need for emergency response workers. Unfortunately, Americans can now count terrorist attacks as another potential need for emergency response workers, who risk developing asbestos cancer every time they help at locations that have damaged buildings.

First Responders Are at Risk of developing Asbestos Cancer

More than 4,000 "first responders" (emergency response workers) were at the World Trade Center (WTC) towers within hours of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The same is true of the Pentagon attack the same day, and of other disasters such as:

  • the hurricanes that destroyed thousands of buildings in Louisiana and Mississippi in 2005
  • the 1994 Southern California ("Northridge") earthquake
  • the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995

Hundreds of other lesser-known and smaller-scale disasters have been followed by the heroic actions of emergency response workers, and they too may have been exposed to dangerous levels of asbestos.

Asbestos Fibers Released into the Air

When a building is damaged by a bomb, fire, flooding, earthquake, etc., the building components that contain asbestos may be disturbed, releasing significant amounts of asbestos fibers into the air. Most of the Sept. 11 first responders weren't wearing protective respiratory gear when they worked at the site that later came to be called Ground Zero. There were toxic levels of asbestos and other contaminants in the air, such as benzene, lead, and dioxin.

9/11 Emergency Response Workers Exposed to Asbestos Cancer

It was eventually confirmed that about three-quarters of the WTC emergency response workers developed respiratory problems — no doubt from the asbestos and other toxins they had been exposed to at the site. In fact, an emergency response worker with the New York Fire Department who worked at the WTC site died of mesothelioma cancer in 2006.

The only confirmed cause of mesothelioma cancer is asbestos exposure. Asbestos fibers, once inhaled, lodge themselves in the lungs and other organs and lead to serious, potentially fatal illnesses like mesothelioma cancer. Asbestos cancer diseases may take decades to manifest themselves after the asbestos exposure.

Learn More about Asbestos Cancer

If you're an emergency response worker, or if a member of your family has done such work, find out more about the risks of developing asbestos cancer by contacting mesothelioma treatment centers online today.

Emergency Response Workers (english) / Trabajadores de Primeros Auxilios (spanish)

Supporting Cancer Research

More than half a million Americans die from cancer every year, and the number of those due to mesothelioma is steadily increasing. You can help the fight against cancer by contributing to a governmental or private organization dedicated to finding treatments through research. Visit our list of organizations that accept cancer donations.