Powered by Lexis+®

Related Glossary Terms

CASE STUDY

“LexisPSL and the other Lexis solutions support our business in exactly the way we want. They enable us to quickly turn around work and deliver the best possible service to our clients.”

SBP Law

Access all documents on Asbestosis

Asbestosis meaning

What does Asbestosis mean?
asbestosis is a chronic, progressive scarring (fibrosis) of the lungs caused by inhaling asbestos fibres, typically from historic workplace exposure. In legal practice it commonly underpins employers’ liability, public liability and product liability claims arising from asbestos exposure, with damages assessed for pain, suffering and loss of amenity, care, and financial losses. It is a medical condition rather than a term of art and is not generally defined in legislation, though it is recognised across case law and statutory compensation schemes. Causation usually requires proof that negligent exposure materially contributed to the disease. As a divisible disease, liability is commonly apportioned between multiple employers or exposure periods by relative contribution, unlike mesothelioma. Key issues include long latency, breach of historic duties of care, and compliance with statutory duties to control asbestos exposure (for example, the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 in Great Britain, equivalent regulations in Northern Ireland, and Irish health and safety regulations). Limitation generally runs from the claimant’s date of knowledge under the Limitation Act 1980 (England and Wales), the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973, the Limitation (Northern Ireland) Order 1989, and Ireland’s Statute of Limitations regime. Distinct from mesothelioma and pleural plaques; usage is broadly consistent across the...
Speed up all aspects of your legal work with tools that help you to work faster and smarter. Win cases, close deals and grow your business–all whilst saving time and reducing risk.

View the related News about Asbestosis

NEWS
UK Supreme Court: relatives may recover under Damages (Scotland) Act 2011 for mesothelioma death despite pre-mesothelioma settlement discharging employer's liability (Veale and others v Scottish Power UK Plc)

Veale and others v Scottish Power UK Plc [2025] UKSC 45 Background Robert Crozier succumbed to mesothelioma in 2018. In this appeal, the Supreme Court is asked to determine whether his immediate family members can obtain damages from his former employer, Scottish Power UK Plc (Scottish Power), under D(S)A 2011. Crozier worked for Scottish Power from 1969 until 1992. In 2014, he issued proceedings seeking damages against his former employer, having developed pleural plaques and asbestosis as a consequence of exposure to asbestos during the course of his employment. The dispute was settled by agreement between the parties. At the point of settlement, he had not developed mesothelioma; however, the sum paid included compensation reflecting the risk that he might develop mesothelioma in future. By virtue of that settlement, Scottish Power’s liability to Crozier was discharged, with the result that he could not advance further claim against Scottish Power if mesothelioma later emerged. After Crozier’s death, the pursuers, being members of his immediate family, brought a claim against Scottish...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Practice Notes about Asbestosis

PRACTICE NOTES
Medical and litigation aspects of asbestos disease: exposure, conditions, therapies, recoverability of treatment costs, periodical payments orders, and medical evidence

This Practice Note outlines the various asbestos types, ways in which exposure occurs, and the principal asbestos-related illnesses. It also examines advances in therapies, including immunotherapy for mesothelioma, the potential to recover the expense of such interventions, and the deployment of periodical payments orders. Further, it supplies practical guidance on securing medical evidence. For those pursuing personal injury actions for claimants who have developed disease from asbestos exposure, a clear understanding of the material and the severe, often terminal, conditions suffered by the exposed is indispensable. Types of asbestos Asbestos is a collective label for six naturally occurring silicate minerals made up of long, slender, fibrous crystals. During the 1970s and 1980s it was mined on a large scale in numerous countries worldwide, with Canada and South Africa as leading producers. In its different forms, asbestos was widely employed across industry and construction until the 1980s. Its ubiquity stemmed from desirable characteristics, such as sound insulation and resistance to flame, heat, and electricity...

Read More Right Arrow