Hospitals in Europe have been working on creating a new treatment for the deadly mesothelioma disease and are happy to see that it was a success. The new anticancer drug – which has been called “Vinflunine” – has already proven positive results and higher survival rates on diagnosed patients.
December 19th, 2007 | Posted in News, Treatment | No Comments
Bernie Banton spent most of his life finding ways of helping those who had been diagnosed with Mesothelioma due to their work enviroment by campaigning against James Hardie (asbestos company). We are sad to say that he has died at the age of 61 at his home in Sydney with his family by his side.
November 30th, 2007 | Posted in News | No Comments
Mr. Banton is a long standing campaigner for the drug Alimta to be listed on the government’s Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). This week he received news that they would be taking his recommendation and – something he was very excited to hear about.
Mr Abbott said a re-elected coalition government hoped to have Alimta on the PBS in January. Labor has also supported the drug’s listing. Alimta became a campaign issue last week when Mr Abbott apologised after Mr Banton tried to present a 17,000-signature Alimta petition at the minister’s Sydney electoral office.
November 9th, 2007 | Posted in News, Treatment | No Comments
Researchers have been trying to narrow down where people can catch the deadly disease, mesothelioma, and have recently discovered that those who work at the US Coast Guard shipyard have a high chance of catching it. The study also found an increased general mortality rate.
The study followed 4702 (4413 men and 289 women) civilian workers who were employed at the shipyard between January 1950 and December 1964. The study then measured the number of deaths and their causes through 31 December 2001. The study was conducted by S Krstev, P Stewart, J Rusiecki, A Blair and was published in Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
October 16th, 2007 | Posted in Facts, News | No Comments
Madison County Circuit Judge Daniel Stack has begun picking a jury for the county’s first asbestos trial in more than a year. The victim Chester Black of Joplin, Mo., was diagnosed with mesothelioma early in 2006. He will be represented by Randy Gori of The Goldenberg firm in Edwardsville, filed suit earlier this year, seeking compensatory and punitive damages in excess of $400,000.
September 20th, 2007 | Posted in News | No Comments
Investigators in Australia discovered that abnormally high concentrations of soluble mesothelin in pleural and peritoneal effusions are highly suggestive of mesothelioma. Knowing this they are hopeful that they might be able to recognize the disease before it spreads too far. “Measurement of mesothelin in effusions…might be a useful adjunct to serum analysis in patients with suspected malignancy,” Dr. Jenette Creaney, at the University of Western Australia in Nedlands, and associates advise.
July 27th, 2007 | Posted in Facts, News | No Comments
The National Institute for Clinical Excellence(NICE) in the UK has decided to give mesothelioma patients access to the NHS, the only licensed drug. This drug has the ability to releive the pain that mesothelioma patients go through and can possibly prolong their life span. Unite, the UK’s biggest union in the UK, has welcomed this decision with open arms.
July 12th, 2007 | Posted in News | No Comments
Most mesothelioma victims were having trouble finding health care that they could afford. But now things look to be taking a turn for the better. A new bill, that was passed and is planning to be put in effect in 2008, will be allowing more victims of this harmful disease to state benefits.
The Child Maintenance Bill, published this month, confirmed that the government will provide up-front financial support to victims of mesothelioma who were previously not eligible, including those who were exposed to asbestos from a relative, exposed to asbestos environmentally, self-employed and those who can’t trace their exposure to asbestos.
June 22nd, 2007 | Posted in News | No Comments
Researchers are constantly trying to find new and better cures for patients who have been diagnosed with Mesothelioma. One of the clinical treatments that they had experimented with was called Immunotherapy. Immunotherapy is a treatment that promotes or supports the body’s immune system response to a disease.
June 14th, 2007 | Posted in Facts, Treatment | No Comments
A Grandfather battling an asbestos-related disease yesterday won £948,565 High Court damages. The award to 59-year-old Raymond Shanks is believed to be one of the biggest of its kind. Mr Shanks, of Grindon Close, West Monkseaton, north Tyneside, was diagnosed with mesothelioma in 2005, two years after his son, Michael, died of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma at the age of 28.
May 25th, 2007 | Posted in News | No Comments