Even if you file a mesothelioma lawsuit and the case starts moving along, odds are it will end the way most of them do – with a settlement. In fact, in some lawsuits settlement negotiations begin as soon as a complaint is filed and the defending company becomes aware it has been accused of wrongdoing.
The reason for so many settlements is easy enough to understand. Both sides want something, and a settlement is the fastest way for both sides to get their way.
Plaintiffs want money, compensation for having to fight mesothelioma cancer because of asbestos exposure. Defendants usually want to get the claim out of the way quickly and at a minimum cost. Fighting asbestos-related lawsuits can get expensive, and there is no guarantee that the court fight will be a winning one.
The Mesothelioma Center offers a free informational packet that puts the settlement process in context with the disease of mesothelioma and asbestos exposure.
One of the major dangers of asbestos is that its fibers can become airborne. When this happens, they can easily be inhaled by anyone in the vicinity, and these fibers have a chance to stick in the membranous lining of the abdomen, heart, or lungs. In many cases, these fibers present no immediate threat, and they will not make a person suddenly violently ill or send them to the hospital. It is the potential, over time, for the fibers to cause an abnormal cell division leading to the cancer known as malignant mesothelioma that is the real threat this substance possesses. Until the 1970s, asbestos was used in a wide variety of projects thanks to its excellent capacity for heat dispersal and because it made a superior insulator. Among its many other uses, asbestos was often converted into a fibrous form of wall and ceiling insulation that was then installed in commercial and residential buildings. So long as the asbestos remained in a non-frangible or solid form, it posed little threat to those living and working around it, but once asbestos starts to crack or break, its fibers are sent into the air and into the lungs of anyone passing by.
The reason for so many settlements is easy enough to understand. Both sides want something, and a settlement is the fastest way for both sides to get their way.
Plaintiffs want money, compensation for having to fight mesothelioma cancer because of asbestos exposure. Defendants usually want to get the claim out of the way quickly and at a minimum cost. Fighting asbestos-related lawsuits can get expensive, and there is no guarantee that the court fight will be a winning one.
The Mesothelioma Center offers a free informational packet that puts the settlement process in context with the disease of mesothelioma and asbestos exposure.
One of the major dangers of asbestos is that its fibers can become airborne. When this happens, they can easily be inhaled by anyone in the vicinity, and these fibers have a chance to stick in the membranous lining of the abdomen, heart, or lungs. In many cases, these fibers present no immediate threat, and they will not make a person suddenly violently ill or send them to the hospital. It is the potential, over time, for the fibers to cause an abnormal cell division leading to the cancer known as malignant mesothelioma that is the real threat this substance possesses. Until the 1970s, asbestos was used in a wide variety of projects thanks to its excellent capacity for heat dispersal and because it made a superior insulator. Among its many other uses, asbestos was often converted into a fibrous form of wall and ceiling insulation that was then installed in commercial and residential buildings. So long as the asbestos remained in a non-frangible or solid form, it posed little threat to those living and working around it, but once asbestos starts to crack or break, its fibers are sent into the air and into the lungs of anyone passing by.
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