Industrial Hygienist Expert Witness

Certified Industrial Hygienist from Florida

For those of you not dealing with much product liability or personal injury case work, you may not have noticed some newer up ticks and trend lines. For others who have been too focused on one area of this specialized litigation, this note will add to your awareness of things to come.

Asbestos-induced mesothelioma is still very busy. The wave of secondary exposures (such as “take home” exposures) has finally hit the shore and is becoming common in court rooms across the land. More and more asbestos-induced lung cancers, that are more challenging cases to prove, are now being filed with great frequency. These cases still have not targeted the more important group of absent co-defendants, the tobacco industry, however. It is well known that lung cancer rates rise dramatically and disproportionately in asbestos-exposed smokers. That combination of defendants, if it should ever come to pass, will ultimately mean that even deeper pockets will be drawn into the process they helped to create.

Asbestos diseases originating from simple non-occupational exposures in office buildings, public access buildings and shopping malls are about to make an entrance. The general landscape of litigation targets has slowly evolved to include more healthrelated indoor air quality and mold issues, pharmaceutical and medical device suits, petroleum and solvent-related occupational and end-user exposures and diseases, cigarette and tobacco smoke illnesses, and a growing number of “Chinese wall board” personal injury and cost-recovery suits.

Though the governmental authorities, Chambers of Commerce, and oil industry have done a superb job of keeping the expected damages from public scrutiny, the after effects of the BP Gulf oil spill are beginning to finally be realized. The look is grim for the long term. The affected area and the extent of environmental, food chain and business impact continues to reverberate and expand well beyond the shores of Louisiana and Mississippi.

Businesses in that region continue to fail at higher rates and property values have continued even lower. Long term Gulf fisheries and marine biology has been irreparably damaged in the view of many scientists. Large expanses of underwater marine life have sickened and vanished. Though professing the safety of Gulf seafood by the government, the longer term effects on human health and reproduction and cancer rates linked to the multitude of toxic and carcinogenic petroleum components and their bioaccumulation are still open questions. Those compounds are considered substantially contributory to, and can be causally related to such medical outcomes as leukemias, lymphomas, cancers of the liver, kidneys, gastrointestinal tract, nervous system, and possible birth defects. The long term dietary ingestion of such compounds, even at low levels, has never been thoroughly assessed or addressed by EPA and others as it relates to this spill and its aftermath and may yet add a new wave of plaintiffs in years to come. BP has not reportedly been honoring its promises to fully pay all of those claimants in a timely fashion as was publicly promised and expected. Other companies and individuals may also be liable in this episode.

Many more suits will surely follow in this one. Though we haven’t seen any direct linkage in U. S. courts to the radiation releases from Fukushima nuclear power reactors, it is being researched. Sometime in the future, it is expected that predictable increases in thyroid and other cancers will become legal issues tied to the increased global radiation dispersed from this avoidable tragedy.

Laboratory personnel are now a recognized risk group. Multi-plaintiff toxic torts from laboratory-related cases are on the upswing. Other groups at risk are finally emerging from long latency or incubation periods for disease development. They include research chemists in petrochem and organic chemistry laboratories, float-sink coal testing chemists, forensic scientists (and others in law enforcement and fire fighting) working in less-than-safely-designed labs or in meth lab field work, clinical chemists exposed to chemicals, radiation and diseases, and even extend to high school and university science lab teachers exposed to chemicals, radiation and asbestos. Besides laboratory workers, we also have seen cases of instrument repair technicians developing asbestos-related illnesses from the instruments they had worked on.

We are looking at such groups who have now developed higher risks for the development of cancers and other serious illnesses. A lack of proactive OSHA regulatory enforcement to prevent those past exposures in laboratories is finally emerging as a contributory factor in the broad industry-wide practice of using hazardous materials in laboratory equipment and other products without providing accurate warnings about the consequences or how to handle them. Those companies involved with the manufacture or sale of them are now regular defendants in many legal actions across the U. S.

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