Shocking new figures, released by Statistics
Canada, show a relentless rise in the number of Canadians with asbestos-related
disease
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: OCTOBER 13, 2011
Medical
doctors, health advocates and asbestos victims today appealed to federal Health
Minister, Leona Aglukkaq, to take action on the increasing number of cases of
asbestos-related disease occurring in Canada.
“Each of these cases
represents terrible heartbreak and suffering for the person and their family,”
said Heidi von Palleske, whose father and mother both died from mesothelioma
from having been exposed to chrysotile asbestos from the Jeffrey mine (formerly
the Johns Manville mine) in Quebec. “Victims of asbestos are demanding that the
Minister of Health take action. We feel abandoned and betrayed by our
government.”
“Shocking new figures, released by Statistics Canada, show a
relentless rise in the number of Canadians with asbestos-related disease,”
stated Dr Fernand Turcotte, professor emeritus of Public Health and Preventive
Medicine, Laval Univeristy. “In the past 15 years, the number of new cases of
mesothelioma – a deadly disease known only to be caused by asbestos – has almost
doubled from 276 cases in 1992 to 512 cases in 2007, the latest year for which
statistics are available. For each case of mesothelioma, it is conservatively
estimated that there are two or more cases of lung cancer caused by asbestos.
This means that, in 2007, over 1,536 Canadians became victims of deadly
asbestos-related disease. This is a tragedy of colossal proportions. It is a
tragedy that the Minister of Health must address.”
“We demand that
Minister Aglukkaq stop hiding her head in the sand and start acting like a
Minister of Health,” said Stacy Cattran, who lost her father to asbestos. “She
should be protecting the health of Canadians, not protecting the asbestos
industry.”
“What makes these numbers particularly tragic is that they
should never have happened,” said Kathleen Ruff, senior human rights adviser,
Rideau Institute. “We have known for decades that asbestos kills and all use of
asbestos should end. But politics have trumped science and the asbestos
industry, to this day, maintains a stranglehold over government
policy.”
“The Canadian Cancer Society and Canada’s leading medical
organisations have asked you take action to ban the use and export of asbestos,
to prevent further asbestos harm to Canadians and to create sustainable, healthy
jobs for the asbestos mining region,” said Dr Kapil Khatter, former president of
the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment.
“Please
listen to Canada’s medical experts and Canada’s asbestos victims,” said Cathy
Conrad, whose father died earlier this year from mesothelioma. “Do the right
thing for Canadians.”
No comments:
Post a Comment