Asbestos at Home: When Mesothelioma Strikes Without Warning

asbestos exposure in the home

Asbestos exposure in the home—also called “take-home” or “secondhand” exposure—is now a recognized cause of mesothelioma. And if your family was affected, you may still have a legal claim. Mesothelioma doesn’t only strike factory workers. For too many families, the danger came home on dusty uniforms and work clothes tossed in the laundry room. In … Read more

Household Mesothelioma Exposure: The Danger Few Families Ever Saw Coming

Household Mesothelioma Exposure

Household mesothelioma exposure happens when asbestos fibers are carried into the home on work clothes, skin, or personal items. These fibers are invisible, deadly, and capable of causing cancer years—even decades—later. And the people affected? Often wives, daughters, and children who never worked in a plant or mill. Most people associate mesothelioma with factory floors, … Read more

How Secondhand Asbestos Exposure Still Devastates Families in 2025

secondhand asbestos exposure

If you lived with someone who worked in a plant, power station, or steel mill—even as far back as the 1970s or 1980s—you could be at risk of a secondhand asbestos exposure illness. Even now, decades after the last asbestos shipments arrived at Weirton Steel or the mills in Pittsburgh, the risk isn’t gone. Families … Read more

Laundering Asbestos-Contaminated Work Clothes: The Hidden Household Risk

laundering asbestos-contaminated work clothes

For thousands of families across Weirton, Wheeling, Clairton, and other towns in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, laundering asbestos-contaminated work clothes began at home became a hazard to the whole family.. When we talk about asbestos exposure, most people picture factory floors, steel mills, and power stations. But what many don’t realize is that the danger … Read more

Cancer from Asbestos-Contaminated Clothing: What Families Deserve to Know

cancer from asbestos-contaminated-clothing

They called it dust. For thousands of families, that dust would turn into a diagnosis years later cancer from asbestos-contaminated clothing. But what really came home on work clothes from steel mills, power plants, and chemical facilities was something else entirely: asbestos. 🧺 The Danger Nobody Told You About In Weirton, Wheeling, Clairton, and industrial … Read more

Asbestos Cancer from Work Clothes: What Families Need to Know

Asbestos Cancer from Work Clothes

Asbestos Cancer from Work Clothes: What Families Need to Know Not everyone exposed to asbestos worked in a steel mill or chemical plant. Some of them just did the laundry. This type of secondary exposure, asbestos cancer from work clothes, — where asbestos fibers are brought home on dusty clothing — has caused thousands of … Read more

Asbestos Exposure in Weirton Homes: The Hidden Danger from the Mill

asbestos exposure in Weirton homes

In Weirton, West Virginia, the steel mill was more than a job — it was the economic heart of the city. Generations of workers put in long shifts to support their families. But the danger didn’t end at the gate. There was asbestos exposure in Weirton homes. For many families, asbestos came home on clothing … Read more

Household Asbestos Exposure: When Work Clothes Made Families Sick

household asbestos exposure

For years, thousands of women in West Virginia and Pennsylvania were exposed to asbestos fibers without ever stepping inside a steel mill or power plant. This is known as household asbestos exposure, also called take-home asbestos exposure. It happens when workers unknowingly carry asbestos home on their clothing, shoes, or gear—and family members inhale those … Read more

He Worked at the Mill. She Was Exposed at Home.

asbestos from mill work clothes

Asbestos from mill work clothes is called secondary asbestos exposure, also known as take-home exposure. And for thousands of families across West Virginia and Pennsylvania, it’s the reason mothers, wives, and daughters developed mesothelioma or asbestos-related lung disease—decades later. For decades, steelworkers across the Ohio Valley walked through asbestos every day—at mills in Weirton, Clairton, … Read more