"The lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO have been assisting Navy Veterans, shipyard workers and people with asbestos exposure lung cancer for decades."
NEW YORK, NY, March 30, 2020 /24-7PressRelease/ -- The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, "Our number one priority is doing everything possible to ensure a Navy Veteran or person with lung cancer gets the best possible compensation---if earlier in their life they had significant exposure to asbestos. People like this typically do not realize the $30 billion dollar-asbestos trust funds were set up for them too.
"Even if the person smoked cigarettes the compensation for a person like this might exceed a hundred thousand dollars. If your husband or dad has lung cancer and he was a Navy Veteran or shipyard worker and you know he had heavy exposure to asbestos, please call us at 800-714-0303-we want to help. The typical person we are trying to help is over 60 years old. We want to emphasize our initiative is nationwide." https://USNavyLungCancer.Com
To get the financial compensation job done for a Navy Veteran, shipyard worker or a skilled trades or manufacturing worker the US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate has endorsed the remarkable lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO. The lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO have been assisting Navy Veterans, shipyard workers and people with asbestos exposure lung cancer for decades and they are responsible for over a billion dollars in financial compensation for people like this. For direct access to the lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO please call 800-714-0303. www.karstvonoiste.com/
Major US Navy Shipyards include the following. These would have been the shipyard where a Navy Veteran or shipyard worker would have had extreme exposure to asbestos:
Norfolk Naval Shipyard http://www.navsea.navy.mil/Home/Shipyards/Norfolk/
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Bremerton, Washington) http://www.navsea.navy.mil/Home/Shipyards/PSNS-IMF/
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Maine http://www.navsea.navy.mil/Home/Shipyards/Portsmouth/
New London, Connecticut Submarine Base: http://www.navymwrnewlondon.com/
Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard: http://www.navsea.navy.mil/Home/Shipyards/PHNS-IMF/
Brooklyn Navy Shipyard-Brooklyn, New York-Closed 1966
Boston Navy Yard-Boston, Massachusetts-Closed 1974
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard-Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-Closed 1995
Long Beach Naval Shipyard-Long Beach, California-Closed 1997
Hunters Point Naval Shipyard-San Francisco, California-Closed 1974
High-risk workplaces for asbestos exposure include the US Navy, shipyards, power plants, public utilities, manufacturing factories, chemical plants, oil refineries, mines, smelters, pulp and paper mills, aerospace manufacturing facilities, offshore oil rigs, demolition construction work sites, railroads, automotive manufacturing facilities, or auto brake shops. With lung cancer caused by asbestos exposure the lung cancer may not show up until decades after the exposure. https://USNavyLungCancer.Com
According to the American Cancer Society for nonsmokers who have been exposed to asbestos in their workplace the risk of lung cancer is five times that of unexposed workers. https://www.cdc.gov/cancer/lung/statistics/index.htm.
States with the highest incidence of lung cancer include Kentucky, West Virginia, Maine, Tennessee, Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Alabama, and Delaware.
However, a person with mesothelioma or asbestos exposure lung cancer could live in any state including New York, Florida, California, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Texas, Iowa, Georgia, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, Washington, Oregon or Alaska. www.karstvonoiste.com/
For more information about asbestos exposure please visit the NIH's website on this topic: https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet.
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