The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate is appealing to the wife or adult son-daughter of a Navy Veteran with lung cancer to please call the lawyers at Karst von Oiste about compensation if he also had heavy exposure to asbestos on a submarine.

WASHINGTON, DC, November 09, 2020 /Neptune100/ — The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate is urging the family of a Navy Veteran with lung cancer who had significant exposure to asbestos on a submarine to please call the lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303. Financial compensation for a person like this might be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars or more. The Navy Veteran with lung cancer the Advocate is trying to identify served in the navy during the 1960s or 1970s, he is over 60 years old and it does not matter if they smoked cigarettes. The financial compensation does not involve suing the navy. www.karstvonoiste.com/

The Advocate says, “We are urging the wife or adult son-daughter of a Navy Veteran with lung cancer-and who had heavy exposure to asbestos on a ship or submarine to please call the lawyers at Karst von Oiste. Most Navy Veterans like your husband or dad never receive a nickel in financial compensation because they do not realize the $30 billion dollar-asbestos trust funds were set up for them too. If the Navy Veteran-we have described sounds like your husband or dad-please call the lawyers at Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303. We think you will be glad you did.” www.karstvonoiste.com/

US Navy Nuclear Submarines Include:

* Lafayette Class Nuclear Submarine (9 boats in class)

* James Madison Nuclear Submarine (10 boats in class)

* Sturgeon Class Nuclear Submarine (37 boats in class)

* Benjamin Franklin Nuclear Submarine (12 boats in class)

* Los Angeles Class Attack Submarine (62 boats in class)

* Ohio Class Nuclear Submarine (18 boats in class)

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, asbestos exposure lung cancer can happen in any state including California, New York, Texas, Florida, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Wyoming, Utah, Montana, Idaho, Arizona, Washington, Oregon or Alaska. www.karstvonoiste.com/

For more information about asbestos exposure lung cancer and mesothelioma please visit the CDC’s website on these topics: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/asbestos/health_effects_asbestos.html.