The top priority for the US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate is to ensure a Navy Veteran with lung cancer gets compensated if they had heavy exposure to asbestos in the navy and they recommend attorney Erik Karst to get the compensation job done.

WASHINGTON, DC, February 10, 2021 /Neptune100/ — The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate has endorsed attorney Erik Karst of the law firm of Karst von Oiste for a Navy Veteran with lung cancer to ensure a person like this receives the best possible financial compensation results–if decades ago they had significant exposure to asbestos on a navy ship, submarine or at a shipyard. A financial compensation claim for a person like this might exceed $100,000 even if they smoked cigarettes and a claim like this does not involve suing the navy. Erik Karst is one of the nation’s leading asbestos exposure lung cancer and mesothelioma attorneys and he and his team at Karst von Oiste consistently get the best compensation results for their clients. For direct access to attorney Erik Karst of Karst von Oiste please call 800-714-0303 anytime including weekends. www.karstvonoiste.com/

The Advocate Says, “Navy Veterans and or people who decades ago had heavy exposure to asbestos in the navy and or at work and how now developed lung cancer almost never get compensated-even though many to most should. The $30 billion dollar-asbestos trust funds were set up for people exactly like this. The average person we are trying to identify is over 60 years old and their asbestos exposure took place in the 1960s or 1970s. If this sounds like a friend or person you know in any state, please share our press release with their wife or family members at request they call attorney Erik Karst of the law firm of Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303.” www.karstvonoiste.com/

Types of Lung Cancers Include:

Adenocarcinoma: Begins in the cells that form the lining of the lungs, has gland-like properties, makes up just over 30% of lung cancer diagnosed.

* Squamous cell carcinoma: Begins in the thin, flat cells that line the passages of the respiratory tract, makes up just under 30% of lung cancer diagnoses.

* Large cell carcinoma: Poorly differentiated (has none of the features that would allow it to be diagnosed as another type of NSCLC), Faster growing form of NSCLC, makes up about 9% of lung cancer diagnoses.

* Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) makes up 15-20% of all lung cancer cases. It is a type of neuroendocrine tumor with cells that are smaller in size than most other cancer cells. It is a fast-growing cancer that spreads rapidly to other parts of the body. 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, there are people with asbestos exposure lung cancer in Iowa. 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 … fact-sheet.