Archive for the ‘Social Impact’ Category

debra-brewer.jpgDebra Brewer, a women is to sue the Ministry of Defence for £75,000, claiming that hugging her dockyard worker father caused her cancer.

Debra Brewer has been diagnosed with the asbestos-related condition mesothelioma, a form of lung cancer. The 47-year-old’s father, Phillip Northmore, worked as a lagger at Devonport Dockyard in Plymouth for five years in the 1960s when she was a child.

An inquest into his death in August 2006 found he had died from small cell lung cancer, which was linked to asbestos.

Mrs Brewer said she remembered he would always arrive home from work covered in dust but as a young child she never imagined that as she played with her dad, the dust he was coated in could be life-threatening.

John Messham, industrial disease specialist at Debra’s solicitor Bond Pearce, said: “Mesothelioma causes a great deal of suffering to its victims and their families. Asbestos diseases are potentially fatal and so it vital that such cases are dealt with efficiently but also with sympathy and compassion.

Read the rest of this entry »


stop_smoking_warning.jpg

The American Journal of Preventive Medicine issued a report that stated American cigarette warning labels are the smallest and have the least detail printed, making them the least effective.

Other countries such as Canada, Australia, and Britain have warnings that are much larger and include more health information appearing on both sides of the packages. Some countries even have very graphic warning labels printed on their cigarettes.

A study was conducted to see if these larger, more informed labels could make a difference. The study included 15,000 adult smokers in the U.S., U.K, Canada, and Australia to test the effectiveness of the warning labels used in those four countries between 2002 - 2005. The research did suggest that U.S. smokers might benefit from large graphic warnings on the packages. The U.S. smokers were least likely to notice their American labeling. The researchers also concluded that the U.S. warnings are poor compared to those in other countries. It is suggested that the U.S. labels need a makeover and putting quit-smoking resources on cigarette packages might also help.