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North Star Attains UKAS Type C Licence for Asbestos Inspections

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North Star Environmental is delighted to announce its attainment of a Type C Licence under UKAS accreditation ISO 17020.

This licence grants us permission to perform a full range of asbestos inspections to third party organisations.

Within the industry, dutyholders can often overlook the Type C licence, or view it as somehow implied. However, only a select group of analytical companies possess this award, having proven their expertise under scrutiny from the United Kingdom Accreditation Service.

The attainment of a Type C Licence proves the competence, quality and consistency of North Star Environmental’s work. It distinguishes us from our rivals, and further consolidates our position as a powerhouse within the asbestos industry.

We also remain accredited by UKAS to standard ISO 17025, enabling us to test materials for the possible presence of asbestos within mobile and in-house laboratories.

This makes North Star Environmental an even more well-rounded consultancy, and validates our ethos of constant progress through ethical means.

If you require asbestos inspections, surveys, air monitoring, management or any other elite service, then look no further.

North Star Environmental. Where excellence meets integrity.

What Actually is Asbestos?

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The subject of asbestos has been open to rumour, conjecture and hearsay for generations. With so many horror stories appearing on television and in newspapers, it can be difficult to penetrate the urban myth and discover the facts about this hazardous substance.

So, what actually is asbestos, after all?

The term refers to a set of six naturally occurring silicate materials that all share a similar structure of long, thin crystals. Asbestos fibres are invisible to the human eye, but are potentially fatal when inhaled after disturbance.

The substance has been mined for thousands of years, with various generations creating different uses for it, typically within the construction trade.

The Ancient Greeks, Romans and Egyptians all experimented with asbestos in some form, extolling its virtues as a phenomenal insulator. Later, asbestos use soared in Britain during the Industrial Revolution, with a surge in machinery and steam power necessitating controls on heat generation.

In subsequent eras, asbestos was mixed into thousands of different products, from cements and insulating boards to textured coating sprays and beyond. The relative cheapness of asbestos, coupled with its many desirable qualities, made it extremely popular. The substance has a phenomenal tensile strength and is resistant to electricity. For many decades, people hailed it as a ‘wonder substance,’ until knowledge of its toxicity became widespread.

When disturbed, asbestos becomes extremely dangerous. Inhalation of airborne fibres can cause many different diseases, while a long latency period can affect people up to 60 years after exposure.

Asbestos is a carcinogen, and is strongly linked to two types of cancer: mesothelioma, a fatal disease of the lung lining, and asbestos-related lung cancer.

Asbestosis, a scarring of the lungs, is also attributable to asbestos. So is diffuse pleural thickening, where membranes within the lungs and chest wall expand.

The battle to outlaw asbestos was long and winding. The first documented death relating to the substance occurred in 1906, but regulations to limit exposure were not enacted until decades later. A final United Kingdom ban on the supply and use of asbestos came in 1999.

Nevertheless, estimates suggest that nearly 2 million properties across the land may still contain asbestos. The material could be present in any building built or refurbished prior to the final ban, so effective identification and management remains a pivotal priority.

That’s where North Star Environmental plays an indispensable role in the fight for a safer world. Using over a century of combined industry experience, our staff provides expert advice and elite services.

From asbestos surveys and air monitoring through to accredited laboratory testing and management consultation, plus much more, we pride ourselves on delivering a personalised yet professional service.

We push the boundaries of innovation in compliance with all domestic legislation and the highest international standards, acting as a crucial linchpin in the quest for environmental harmony.

To learn more about asbestos, or to arrange a no obligation quote for comprehensive services from an industry powerhouse, contact our dedicated team today.

North Star Environmental. Where excellence meets integrity.

The Tragic Tale of Nellie Kershaw

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The reporting of asbestos related deaths has sadly become commonplace in the modern age. However, there was once a time when very little was known about the substance and the maladies it can spawn.

To learn about the evolution of asbestos knowledge, a journey back in time is required. The year is 1924. The town is Rochdale, Greater Manchester. Nellie Kershaw, a 33-year old textile worker, dies on 14th March after a harrowing illness. Her passing sparks an inquest that will change the world forever.

Born in 1891, Kershaw left school at the age of 12 to work in a cotton mill. She later moved into the asbestos industry, transferring to Turner Brothers, a local firm, in 1917. There, she worked as a factory rover, spinning raw asbestos fibre into yarn. That trade would eventually truncate her life in tragic circumstances.

Kershaw first encountered health complications aged 29. Nevertheless, she continued to work with asbestos until 1922, when illness finally thwarted her. The National Health Insurance certificate declaring her unfit for work referred to ‘asbestos poisoning,’ a rather generic term betraying the rudimentary knowledge prevalent in society at that time.

As this was not a recognised occupational disease, Kershaw failed to qualify for any significant benefits. To compound the problem, Turner Brothers refused to make any financial contributions, leaving Kershaw to spiral towards destitution as her illness deteriorated.

After a harrowing struggle, Kershaw died at 6.30 am on the aforementioned date. Again, Turner Brothers accepted no liability for her injuries, paid no compensation to her family, and even refused to help out with her funeral expenses.

Details of Kershaw’s death were recorded in the British Medical Journal. Perhaps more importantly, EN Molesworth, coroner for Rochdale, launched a formal inquest into Kershaw’s case, kick-starting the journey to industry regulation.

Dr FW Mackichan completed an autopsy and returned ‘pulmonary tuberculosis and heart failure’ as the cause of Kershaw’s death. However, the inquest was subsequently adjourned to allow for a closer inspection of the lungs. After completing that process, Dr William Edmund Cook testified that “mineral particles in the lungs originated from asbestos and were, beyond reasonable doubt, the primary cause of the fibrosis of the lungs and, therefore, of death.”

Walter Joss, the man who made the initial diagnosis of ‘asbestos poisoning,’ contributed a written testimony to the inquest. He explained how “previous experience of such a lung condition for many of his patients who were asbestos workers” contributed to the diagnosis, and said that up to twelve cases per year came before him.

As such, when Nellie Kershaw’s death certificate was issued on 2nd April 1924, it cited ‘fibrosis of the lungs due to the inhalation of mineral particles’ as the cause of death. Three years later, in a more detailed reporting of Kershaw’s case by the British Medical Journal, Dr Cook gave the disease a name that will echo for eternity: ‘pulmonary asbestosis.’

Following Cook’s paper, Parliament launched an inquiry into the effects of asbestos dust. The resultant report – Occurrence of Pulmonary Fibrosis & Other Pulmonary Affections in Asbestos Workers – concluded that asbestosis was irrefutably linked to the inhalation of asbestos dust. It also contained the first significant health study of asbestos workers, and found that 66% of those employed as such for more than 20 years suffered from asbestosis.

In turn, such shocking discoveries led to the first Asbestos Industry Regulations, which came into effect in March 1932.

More than seven decades later, in April 2006 – seven years after a final ban on the supply and use of asbestos in Britain – a relative of Kershaw unveiled a memorial stone to all asbestos victims around the world. It was a fitting tribute to the first publicly-known victim of asbestos, and a timeless reminder of its horrific consequences.