Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium

This article discusses (i) the history of asbestos use between 1948 and 2001; (ii) the development of the current epidemic of mesothelioma deaths (1969-2014); and (iii) reasons for the belated government intervention in Belgium. Belgium imported over two billion tonnes of raw asbestos from 1948 unti...

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Main Authors: Laura Van den Borre, Patrick Deboosere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2018-04-01
Series:Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://test.openjournals.nl/tseg/article/view/8256
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spelling doaj-bbdc17a8345e43bf809b39ff96dd31302021-10-02T12:47:34ZengOpen JournalsTijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis1572-17012468-90682018-04-01144Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in BelgiumLaura Van den Borre0Patrick Deboosere1Vrije Universiteit BrusselVrije Universiteit BrusselThis article discusses (i) the history of asbestos use between 1948 and 2001; (ii) the development of the current epidemic of mesothelioma deaths (1969-2014); and (iii) reasons for the belated government intervention in Belgium. Belgium imported over two billion tonnes of raw asbestos from 1948 until 1998. The current peak in male mesothelioma deaths corresponds to the expansion of the asbestos industry 40 years earlier. Reasons for the delayed government intervention include long latency periods of asbestos-related diseases, faulty communication about health risks, a strong asbestos lobby and an ambivalent government. Public health was sacrificed in favour of industrial development, economic advancement and political gain. The Belgian case further underlines the need for a global ban on asbestos. https://test.openjournals.nl/tseg/article/view/8256AsbestosBelgiumMesotheliomaMortalityImportEpidemiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Van den Borre
Patrick Deboosere
spellingShingle Laura Van den Borre
Patrick Deboosere
Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis
Asbestos
Belgium
Mesothelioma
Mortality
Import
Epidemiology
author_facet Laura Van den Borre
Patrick Deboosere
author_sort Laura Van den Borre
title Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
title_short Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
title_full Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
title_fullStr Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
title_full_unstemmed Understanding a Man-Made Epidemic: The Relation between Historical Asbestos Consumption and Mesothelioma Mortality in Belgium
title_sort understanding a man-made epidemic: the relation between historical asbestos consumption and mesothelioma mortality in belgium
publisher Open Journals
series Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis
issn 1572-1701
2468-9068
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This article discusses (i) the history of asbestos use between 1948 and 2001; (ii) the development of the current epidemic of mesothelioma deaths (1969-2014); and (iii) reasons for the belated government intervention in Belgium. Belgium imported over two billion tonnes of raw asbestos from 1948 until 1998. The current peak in male mesothelioma deaths corresponds to the expansion of the asbestos industry 40 years earlier. Reasons for the delayed government intervention include long latency periods of asbestos-related diseases, faulty communication about health risks, a strong asbestos lobby and an ambivalent government. Public health was sacrificed in favour of industrial development, economic advancement and political gain. The Belgian case further underlines the need for a global ban on asbestos.
topic Asbestos
Belgium
Mesothelioma
Mortality
Import
Epidemiology
url https://test.openjournals.nl/tseg/article/view/8256
work_keys_str_mv AT lauravandenborre understandingamanmadeepidemictherelationbetweenhistoricalasbestosconsumptionandmesotheliomamortalityinbelgium
AT patrickdeboosere understandingamanmadeepidemictherelationbetweenhistoricalasbestosconsumptionandmesotheliomamortalityinbelgium
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