Episode 17: Asbestosis Gets a Name episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 16, 2026 · 16 MIN

Episode 17: Asbestosis Gets a Name

from Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making · host AsbestosPodcast.com

Episode 17: Asbestosis Gets a NameIn 1924, Nellie Kershaw was buried in an unmarked grave in Rochdale Cemetery. Turner Brothers refused to pay her husband seven pounds for the funeral — their reasoning, in writing: “it would create a precedent.” She died of a disease that had no name. Three years later, three independent researchers converged on the same term in the same issue of the British Medical Journal: pulmonary asbestosis. Within eight years, the American asbestos industry had suppressed the evidence, deleted the fatal sentence from a public health report, and adopted a formal policy of silence — “the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.”In This EpisodeHow Dr. William Edmund Cooke — a one-man pathology department at Wigan Infirmary who started work at 5 AM and hunted fossils on weekends — used his geological training to identify asbestos fibers that other pathologists would have missedHow Dr. Anthony J. Lanza — the man who coined the term “dust disease” — deleted eight words from a U.S. Public Health Report at the request of Johns-Manville’s lawyers: “It is possible for uncomplicated asbestosis to result fatally”Expert AnalysisPaul Danziger, Founding Partner with over 30 years of mesothelioma litigation experience, notes that the Simpson-Brown correspondence remains among the most cited documents in asbestos litigation — proof that industry leaders coordinated to suppress evidence of asbestos dangers.Dave Foster, Executive Director of Patient Advocacy who lost his father to asbestos lung cancer, explains that the 20-50 year latency period means workers from the 1920s-1930s were still developing disease into the 1980s — making historical exposure timelines critical for compensation claims.Key ResourcesUnderstanding Asbestos Exposure RisksMesothelioma Compensation Options — including $30+ billion available in asbestos trust fundsFree Consultation — approximately 3,000 Americans are diagnosed with mesothelioma each yearLinks: dandell.com | Paul Danziger | Dave Foster | Asbestos Exposure | Compensation Guide | SettlementsAsbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano Mesothelioma Law Firm, a nationwide practice with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, the exposure happened somewhere—and Paul Danziger and Rod De Llano know how to trace it back. For a free consultation, visit https://dandell.com.Resources:→ Mesothelioma legal rights: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/ → Asbestos exposure sources: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/ → Asbestos trust funds ($30B+ available): https://dandell.com/asbestos-trust-funds/ → Free case evaluation: https://dandell.com/contact/ Sister Podcast - MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast:http://mesotheliomapodcast.com/

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Episode 17: Asbestosis Gets a Name

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This episode was published on March 16, 2026.

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Episode 17: Asbestosis Gets a NameIn 1924, Nellie Kershaw was buried in an unmarked grave in Rochdale Cemetery. Turner Brothers refused to pay her husband seven pounds for the funeral — their reasoning, in writing: “it would create a precedent.” She...

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