Monthly Archives: June 2009

Breathtaking Cycle Challenge

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Anti-asbestos campaigners have embarked on a gruelling 1200 mile bike journey to raise awareness about mesotheliomia.They will cycle upto 100 miles every day.

Jason Addy, of Save Spodden Valley, will join two local solicitors, Paul Glanville and Katrina London, on the extensive journey from Glasgow to Southampton, criss-crossing across the country and stopping at several locations on the way.

The Prime Minister has expressed his support for the voyage, which began on 20 June and will continue through to 4 July.

“There are many breath-taking facts about asbestos – the cause of diseases that remain Britain’s biggest workplace killer.

“We are calling for a National Centre for Asbestos Related Disease (NCARD).”

Breathtaking Cycle Team arriving on Gateshead Millennium Bridge

Breathtaking Cycle Team arriving on Gateshead Millennium Bridge

The Deputy Mayor of Gateshead Cllr. Pauline Dillon welcomes the team to the North East

Katrina proudly "models" the ANGEL OF THE NORTH tie she'd been presented with by Cllr. Joe Mitchison

Katrina proudly "models" the ANGEL OF THE NORTH tie she'd been presented with by Cllr. Joe Mitchison

The team reach Albert Square in Manchester on Friday 26th June and were greeted by dozens of families bereaved by mesothelioma.

Ronald Walsh from Stockport, who is 77 and suffers from mesothelioma, and who was a keen cyclist will be there to meet them with his wife, Margaret, says:“I think it is fantastic that these courageous young people are willing to cycle 1200 miles in just 12 days to raise awareness about mesothelioma and to call for better treatment for so many people like me who are facing the dreadful consequences of exposure to asbestos. I look forward to meeting them and congratulating them on their tremendous work.”

Tony Whitston, Greater Manchester Asbestos Victims Support Group, says:
“Eighty Nine (89) people were diagnosedwith mesothelioma in Greater Manchester in 2008 and we have already seen 42 newly diagnosed mesothelioma patients this year. Hundreds of Greater Manchester families affected by mesothelioma will be supporting the cyclists.” 
Katrina London, says:
“It will be tough going as we will be cycling up to 100 miles a day, but it is for a very important cause and promises to be a breathtaking journey to raise awareness of the legacy caused by asbestos.”

“It is a staggering fact that asbestos-related cancers remain one of Britain’s biggest workplace killers in 2009, yet there is practically no dedicated research funding into these cancers.”

“The main aim is to show the terrible impact asbestos has upon the victims of mesothelioma, to raise funds for research into asbestos-related cancers and show our support for the campaign to set up a national centre for asbestos-related diseases.”

The Birmingam Leg began on 1st July at the site of the old Canadian Consulate in Colmore Row  They were joined by local people bereaved by these diseases and construction union members who gathered to wave them off and to demand an end to the international trade in asbestos.

The Team arrive in Birmingham

The Team arrive in Birmingham

They chose to begin at the ex- Canadian Consulate because the today is Canada’s national day and they want it to end its part in the asbestos trade, a trade which leads to over 100,000 thousand deaths each year worldwide.

They point out that the Canadian Government must know about the danger because, despite being one of the biggest exporters of asbestos in the world, the use of this material is effectively banned within its own borders.

The effects of this trade are everywhere. Here in the West Midlands, despite asbestos being banned in the UK since 2000, people continue to die because they were exposed to asbestos. It remains the biggest single work related cause of death and more people die because of it than die on the roads each year.

Amongst those most at risk are construction workers, which is why their union helped to organise the protest. Neil Vernon, from UCATT, said that “on Canada’s national day- the Government listens to the growing number of people in their own country and throughout the world calling for an end to this evil trade. Too many of my members have died, and thousands more face this danger every day. When people think of Canada they think of clean air and mountain scenery; its time to live up to that image and end this deadly trade.”

Doug Jewell from local support group Asbestos Support West Midlands is also hoping for an end to the trade. “The misery that asbestos causes has been called a silent epidemic; well things like this epic bike ride show that people are no longer staying silent. It’s an outrage that the international trade continues and it’s an outrage that the victims of asbestos in this country still have to fight for justice. That’s why we also support the cyclists call for a National Centre for Asbestos Related Diseases. Such a Centre truly would offer the hope of a better future for sufferers and their families”.

Katrina London, one of the cyclists and a solicitor who specialises in asbestos cases for Irwin Mitchell’s, said about their epic ride; “it’s tough going, cycling up to 100 miles a day, but it is a very important cause. Ours is proving to be a breathtaking journey to raise awareness of the legacy caused by asbestos” she said.
A website has just been set up for more information: www.breathtaking-journey.com

BRITISH LUNG FOUNDATION / MICK KNIGHTON MESOTHELIOMA RESEARCH FUND AWARD 2009

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The MKMRF are delighted to announce the recipient of this years £100,00 Award  is  Dr SamJanes, Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant at University College London.

Research Study:

Treating Malignant Mesothelioma with Stem Cells

Despite major advances in several cancers over the past thirty years mesothelioma is still incurable and all those affected will die of the disease.

Dr Janes has recently demonstrated that Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSC) usually found in bone marrow preferentially travel to and integrate into tumours where they form some of the infrastructure called stoma. He has shown in a mestastic lung cancer that these cells can deliver a therapy to the tumour cells that result in the death of tumour cells but not the normal surrounding tissue cells.

He now  wants to deliver this therapy to Mesothelioma. Using this system in another tumour initial experiments to control the growth of tumours has  in almost 40% of cases eliminate them. If successful this may introduce a new era of treatments for Mesothelioma patients.

Mesothelioma is particularly suitable to this type of therapy because the cells can be delivered by a tube directly into the chest avoiding problems encountered in trying to target other cancer cells around the body.

Asbestos Victims Demand Payout from Insurance Industry

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June 10th 2009

Campaigners

Campaigners

Insurance fat cats were yesterday urged to donate a “£14 million windfall” from asbestos compensation payouts on badly-needed research into asbestos-related diseases.

For the past decade, insurers have saved vast sums on payouts where asbestos victims had already got compensation from the Government.

Last October, the Government changed the rules and began reclaiming these lump-sum payouts back from insurers when victims go on to make successful claims.

But the insurance industry was allowed to keep the money it had already saved – estimated by legal experts to be around £14 million over ten years.

Protestors outside the Association of British Insurers yesterday called on the insurance industry to use some of that money to try to find a cure for – or at least alleviate the suffering of – future victims of the asbestos timebomb.

Tony Whitston, of the Asbestos Victims Support Group Forum, said: “It’s like the MPs and their expenses.”It was within the rules but it was wrong. The insurance industry saved millions of pounds in compensation that was instead paid by taxpayers.”They should do the decent thing and donate this money to researching ways to help future victims of the asbestos timebomb.”

Deaths caused by asbestos are still increasing, are set to hit 6,000 a year and are not expected to decline until 2030.A new National Centre for Asbestos-Related Disease is one of the five demands of the Daily Mirror’s Asbestos Timebomb campaign.

Insurers have not responded to our call for them to help pay for the £10 million centre.But a spokesman for the Association of British Insurers said that the industry didn’t make a windfall as it took into account Government payouts “when setting its premiums”.

That seems unlikely, given that the Government compensation scheme began in 1979, after most of today’s asbestos victims were already exposed, and not long before the most dangerous types of asbestos were banned in 1985.

Most of the asbestos liability insurance claims are on policies dating back to the 1960s and 1970s, when the deadly material was widely used.Despite the credit crunch, the insurance industry is in good health.

Four insurance giants recently announced a court fight to overturn the Scottish Parliament’s decision to re-instate compensation for sufferers of asbestos-linked pleural plaques.

These four firms – which together make up more than half the employee liability insurance market – have reported strong accounts over the last 12 months:

* Aviva – formerly known as Norwich Union – recently announced operating profits of £2.3 billion, up 4% last year, and will this year give £875 million in dividends to shareholders.

* AXA made £1.2 billion profits last year and gave £835 million in dividends to shareholders.

* Royal Sun Alliance made pre-tax profits of £759 million last year and handed shareholders £250 million in dividends.

* Zurich made £3.5 billion profits in 2008, earning £913 million to shareholders.

Nick Sommerlad

http://blogs.mirror.co