So where am I Likely to Find Asbestos?
Building materials containing asbestos were widely used from 1930 to around 1980, particularly from the 1960s onwards. So, houses and flats built or refurbished at this time may contain asbestos materials. Asbestos has also been used in some heat-resistant household products, such as oven gloves and ironing boards. The use of asbestos in these products fell around the mid-1980s and, since 1993, the Government has banned the use of asbestos in most products.
Insulating board
(asbestos content 20% to 45%)
Insulating board has been used for fire protection and heat and sound insulation. It is particularly common in housing built in the 1960s and 1970s.
Lagging
(asbestos content 55% to 100%)
Asbestos lagging has been used for thermal insulation of pipes and boilers. It was widely used in public buildings and system built flats during the 1960s to early 1970s in areas such as boiler houses and heating plants.
Sprayed coating
(asbestos content up to 85%)
Sprayed asbestos coatings were used to protect structural steel from fire. They are often found in system-built flats which were built during the 1960s. The coatings were mainly applied around the core of the building such as in service ducts, lift shafts, and so on. Builders stopped using asbestos coatings in 1974, and the spraying of asbestos has been banned since 1986.
Asbestos-cement products
(asbestos content mainly 10% to 15%, but sometimes up to 40%)
Asbestos cement is the most widely used asbestos material. It is found in many types of building as shaped sheets for roofing and wall cladding, in flat sheets and partition boards for linings to walls and ceilings, in bath panels, soffit boards, fire surrounds, flue pipes, cold-water tanks and as roofing tiles and slates. It has often been used as roofing and cladding for garages and sheds and also in guttering and drainpipes. It has not been used as much since 1976.
Other buildings materials and products
Asbestos has been used in a variety of other building materials, for example, in decorative coatings such as Artex, textured paints and plasters. These are still widely in place, but since 1998, the Government has banned supplying or using these. Plastic floor tiles, cushion flooring, roofing felts, tapes, ropes, felts and blankets can also contain asbestos. Health Effects of Asbestos Exposure Exposure to inhalation of asbestos fibres can lead to a number of diseases including:
Asbestosis or fibrosis (scarring) of the lungs
Lung cancer
Mesothelioma
There are no known cures for asbestos related diseases. It is possible that repeated low-Ievel exposures can lead to asbestos related diseases, although high exposure for long periods is linked more clearly to these illnesses. It is reported that many of those suffering today from asbestos related diseases historically worked with the manufacture of asbestos containing products and building trades.
Asbestos related diseases are currently responsible for about 3000 deaths a year in Britain.
