asbestosis pleural plaques
Sunday, June 14th, 2009
Recent reports suggest Prime Minister Gordon Brown is ready to make its support known about the asbestos-related disease pleural plaques.
It expects the decision will become clear in April.
The main stumbling block is that insurers are not happy to pay damages for a disease that according to them shows little or no symptoms. This may be true but the fact that pleural plaques will probably have been diagnosed suffering the mental torture, as an indicator of a company from exposure to asbestos has occurred. With that in mind, it may be a calling card for more serious asbestos-related diseases as pleural thickening, asbestosis, lung cancer and mesothelioma. Making ignore the mental stress of those diagnosed with pleural plaques suffer is unacceptable and irresponsible, two traits that should not be associated with insurance companies.
Perhaps the responsibility of companies is primarily to their shareholders than those who had been paid to protect. So let's hope the government see sense and re-establish credit UK wide. In Scotland's ability to claim damages for pleural plaques, following a vote in the vast majority of Holyrood, but this does not apply in England and Wales.
As the number of asbestos-related illnesses come to mind, experts believe that this will be between 2014-2018 should be of great importance the UK government has yet delivered an approach to claim compensation regardless of the location of the sufferer.
The campaign appears to have obtained a positive result and the "postcode lottery" for this type of disease appears to be complete. It is not known at this time whether the compensation will be through individual claim or through a system.
For current information about claiming compensation for pleural plaques and other asbestos-related diseases visit: href = "http://www.asbestosiscompensationclaims.co.uk" target = "_blank"> www.asbestosiscompensationclaims.co.uk
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Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Pleural Plaques and the Prime Minister
Dr Pamela Abernethy, of Edinburgh legal firm Simpson & Marwick WS testifies asbestos related plaques ‘are good’