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ICOH FOR GLOBAL ASBESTOS BAN AND ELIMINATION
OF ASBESTOS RELATED DISEASES

ICOH has set among its main priorities the Asbestos Ban, taking a very clear position in favour
of the global ban of asbestos. Through its official bodies and individual members ICOH took actions
at all levels of activity, global, national and workplace levels:


1. After the "Call for an International ban for asbestos" produced by the Collegium Ramazzini, the ICOH Officers Meeting in Paris, 30-31 August 1999, chaired by the ICOH President at that time, Professor Jean-Francois Caillard, decided to endorse it.

Furthermore the endorsement of the "Call for an International ban for asbestos" was approved by the ICOH 2nd General Assembly on 1 September 2000, in connection of the ICOH 2000 Congress.

See Enclosure 1
See Enclosure 2

2. The need for a continuous follow-up was recognised during ICOH 2000-2002 triennium and the ICOH
President, Prof. Bent Knave, decided to establish a Task Group on Asbestos (including members of the Board),
that presented in the ICOH Board Meeting of March 1-2 2002, an article by Benedetto Terracini "World Asbestos Congress: Past, Present and Future Osasco 17-20 September 2000", as a report. The article was endorsed
by the Board.

Furthermore the endorsement of the "Call for an International ban for asbestos" was approved by the ICOH
2nd General Assembly on 1 September 2000, in connection of the ICOH 2000 Congress.

See Enclosure 3

3. The European Conference on Asbestos 2003 on 3-6 September 2003, drafted and adopted the “Dresden Declaration on Protection of Workers against Asbestos” The Declaration was drafted with strong input
by ICOH President and the Secretary of the Scientific Committee on Industrial Hygiene and it summarizes
the contemporary effort of ICOH which has the scientific role to “provide guidance and support for
a well-governed process to eliminate the use of asbestos”.

For this aim, ICOH Past President, Prof. Jorma Rantanen, during the 13th Session of the Joint ILO/WHO Committee on Occupational Health made the proposal for elimination of asbestos related diseases as a priority for ILO/WHO collaboration. The Committee unanimously approved the proposal.

See Enclosure 4
See Enclosure 5

4. ICOH commitment in this field was also attested by the full support to the Asian Asbestos Conference 2006 organized in Thailand on 26-27 July, 2006 by the Ministry of Public Health and co-sponsored by the International Labour Office (ILO), the World Health Organization (WHO), International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS)
and the International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH).

During the Conference, Prof. Jorma Rantanen declared ICOH's unequivocal support for a global asbestos ban; this position is rooted in the experiences of ICOH members who have observed the dire consequences
of hazardous asbestos exposures on their patients in industrialized countries.

Prof. Rantanen urged that concerted action be taken by international agencies, national governments, trade unions and NGOs to raise awareness of the asbestos hazard and to highlight the long-term economic benefits
of transferring to non-asbestos technologies.

5. The Bangkok Declaration, recalling the ILO resolution on Asbestos, the ILO Conventions on Occupational
Cancer (No. 139), the Safety in the Use of Asbestos, the WHO Global Strategy on Occupational Health for All
and the WHA Resolution 58.22 on Cancer Prevention and Control and considering the ICOH International Code
of Ethics for Occupational Health Professionals, declared the support of its signatories for a global asbestos
ban and was widely disseminated through many networks.

See Enclosure 6

6. For the current triennium 2009-2012, a new ICOH Working Group on the Elimination of Asbestos-related Diseases has been set. The Working Group will mainly focus on examining the existing regulations and bans
in order to develop specific recommendation for actions and guidelines.

At the national level the expert input of ICOH members to the decisions concerning the ban of asbestos can
be found for example in Finland, Sweden, Germany, Japan, Norway etc. The ICOH members also were most instrumental in production of Helsinki Criteria for Diagnosis and Attribution of Asbestos Related Diseases
a document that has been taken in use in everyday practices in diagnosing, recognition and compensation
of asbestos related diseases and has also been used in courts in some countries in defence of victims
of the diseased persons.

ICOH members also train the experts in occupational medicine and safety by using the research and criteria documents as a support for education.

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