Work History

Occupational Asbestos Exposure Risks

The jobs, industries, and work environments historically associated with elevated asbestos exposure and later mesothelioma risk.

Updated March 24, 2026 7 min read Live article

Workplace exposure remains the clearest mesothelioma risk pattern. Public-health agencies consistently identify occupational asbestos exposure as the main risk factor for pleural mesothelioma. Higher-risk work has historically included insulation, shipbuilding and ship repair, plumbing and pipefitting, construction, manufacturing, refinery work, and automotive brake or clutch work. American Cancer Society

Historical shipyard with industrial workers
Workers in a mid-20th century industrial setting where asbestos-containing materials were commonly handled without modern protection.

Industries repeatedly identified in federal data

CDC mortality reporting has found elevated mesothelioma burden in sectors such as ship and boat building and repair, petroleum refining, and industrial chemical manufacturing. Occupations with elevated burden included insulation workers, plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters. CDC MMWR

Why these jobs carried more risk

Asbestos was valued for heat resistance, durability, and insulation properties. It appeared in pipe covering, boilers, insulation, cement products, spray coatings, gaskets, brakes, and other materials. In high-heat or heavy industrial settings, those materials could be cut, repaired, removed, or degraded over time, releasing fibers into the air. OSHA

Risk was tied to actual exposure conditions, not just job titles. Renovation, demolition, repair, and maintenance work often created the highest airborne exposures when older materials were disturbed. OSHA

Long delays complicate exposure history

Because mesothelioma can appear decades after exposure, current occupation does not always reveal the relevant risk. Earlier work history often matters more than a person’s current role. CDC MMWR

Sources Verified History