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Ohio Asbestos & Mesothelioma Information

Understanding your rights under Ohio law

Reviewed by legal professionals Ohio-specific guidance
3,000+ new mesothelioma diagnoses annually in the U.S.
2 Years Ohio statute of limitations (Ohio Rev. Code Β§ 2305.10)
20–50 yr typical latency from exposure to diagnosis
$30B+ held in asbestos bankruptcy trust funds
Editorial standards: all content reviewed for legal accuracy
Last reviewed: May 2026
About this site: Rights Watch Media Group LLC

What Is Mesothelioma?

Mesothelioma is a rare cancer caused almost exclusively by asbestos exposure. It affects the mesothelium β€” the thin lining around the lungs, abdomen, or heart. Because of a latency period of 20 to 50 years between exposure and diagnosis, many patients are diagnosed decades after their working years ended.

Who is at risk: workers in powerhouses, refineries, shipyards, manufacturing, and construction β€” and family members who experienced secondary exposure through work clothing.

Learn more about mesothelioma β†’

Other Diseases Caused by Asbestos

Asbestos exposure is linked to several serious diseases beyond mesothelioma:

  • Asbestosis β€” progressive scarring of lung tissue (pulmonary fibrosis)
  • Asbestos-related lung cancer β€” risk is multiplied for smokers
  • Pleural plaques β€” calcified thickening of the lung lining
  • Pleural effusion β€” fluid accumulation around the lungs
  • Peritoneal mesothelioma β€” affects the abdominal lining

All are linked to occupational or secondary asbestos exposure and may qualify for legal compensation.

What Are the Most Important Things To Do Right Now?

A diagnosis can feel overwhelming. These are the most important steps β€” not to create urgency, but because timing matters medically and legally.

1

See a specialist β€” pulmonologist or oncologist

Ask your primary care physician for a referral to a pulmonologist or oncologist who treats asbestos-related diseases. Getting an accurate pathological diagnosis is the foundation for everything else.

2

Keep records of all medical visits

Request copies of every test, scan, pathology report, and doctor's note. These records matter medically and legally. Store them in one organized place.

3

Document your work history and exposure sites

Write down every employer, jobsite, and trade you worked in β€” especially before 1980. Include military service. This becomes the backbone of understanding when and where exposure occurred.

4

Consult a mesothelioma attorney β€” Ohio has a two-year filing deadline

Ohio’s statute of limitations for asbestos claims is two years from diagnosis (Ohio Rev. Code Β§ 2305.10). Consultation is free. An attorney can assess your specific situation without pressure or commitment.

5

Connect with a patient support community

Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF), the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), and local patient groups offer peer support, treatment information, and resources at no cost.

Facing a Diagnosis: What to Know

A mesothelioma or asbestos-related diagnosis changes everything β€” and you deserve clear, honest answers. This section is written for patients and families, not lawyers. No jargon, no pressure. Just the information most people need when they're navigating this for the first time.

Smoking history does NOT disqualify an asbestos cancer claim.

Asbestos and tobacco smoke are recognized synergistic carcinogens β€” together they substantially elevate the risk of lung cancer. Ohio courts recognize combined causation. A prior history of smoking does not bar a mesothelioma or asbestos lung cancer claim, and it is not a reason to assume you have no recourse. This is one of the most common misconceptions workers and their families have when they first explore their options.

What is mesothelioma, and how is it different from lung cancer?
Mesothelioma is a cancer of the mesothelium β€” the thin tissue lining the lungs (pleural), abdomen (peritoneal), or heart. It is caused almost exclusively by asbestos exposure and has a latency period of 20 to 50 years. Asbestos-related lung cancer develops in the lung tissue itself and can affect both smokers and non-smokers with occupational asbestos exposure. Both are compensable diseases with distinct medical and legal pathways.
What other diseases are caused by asbestos exposure?
Asbestos causes four primary diseases: mesothelioma, asbestos-related lung cancer, asbestosis (progressive scarring of lung tissue), and pleural disease (plaques, thickening, and effusions). Asbestosis and pleural plaques are markers of significant past exposure. While not cancers themselves, they document a clear exposure history and can support both workers' compensation and civil claims. Pleural disease often progresses β€” monitoring is important.
How long ago could the exposure have happened?
Mesothelioma has the longest latency of any occupational cancer β€” typically 20 to 50 years between the first significant exposure and a diagnosis. That means workers exposed in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s are receiving diagnoses now. Asbestos was used heavily in Ohio industrial facilities, power plants, refineries, and construction sites throughout that era. Exposure from decades ago is the rule, not the exception.
What if I don't remember all the jobsites where I worked?
This is extremely common. These exposures often occurred 40, 50, or 60 years ago β€” many sites have closed, records are difficult to find, and employers no longer exist. There are teams that specialize in worksite history reconstruction, using union records, Social Security earnings histories, co-worker depositions, and public industrial archives to document what products were present and who was there. Photographs, paycheck stubs, union books, and even obituaries have all served as evidence. Incomplete memory is not a barrier. Try our new Research Assistant ›
Can family members be affected β€” even without working at a job site?
Yes. Secondary or take-home exposure is a recognized and compensable form of asbestos exposure. Workers who brought asbestos fibers home on their clothing, hair, and skin exposed spouses, children, and others in the household. Wives who laundered work clothes, children who greeted a parent at the door β€” these pathways of exposure have been documented in medical literature and upheld in courts. Family member claims are distinct from workers' claims but equally valid.
What are the most important things to do right now?
First: seek care at a mesothelioma-specialized cancer center β€” treatment outcomes differ significantly based on the care team's experience volume. Second: preserve any documentation of work history β€” union cards, old pay stubs, pension records, co-worker contacts. Third: understand that there are filing deadlines under Ohio law (currently 2 years in Ohio from date of diagnosis). Nothing about consulting a specialist creates any obligation β€” but waiting can close doors that cannot be reopened.
Support resources: The Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF) is the leading independent patient advocacy organization and research funder. The GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer maintains a support line and peer-to-peer patient network. Both are independent nonprofit organizations with no law firm affiliation.
Ohio Resident β€” But Worked Across State Lines?

Many Ohio workers spent careers at plants in Indiana, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Asbestos exposure doesn’t stop at the state border.

Research Other States ›

Mesothelioma Treatment & Specialized Cancer Centers

Treatment outcomes for mesothelioma, asbestosis, asbestos-related lung cancer, and pleural disease differ substantially based on where care is received. High-volume programs with dedicated multidisciplinary teams have access to clinical trials, specialized surgical techniques, and pathologists who see these cases regularly. For Ohio patients, these are the programs worth knowing.

Ohio β€” Primary Care Centers
Cleveland Clinic Cancer Institute
Cleveland, OH
Ohio's premier comprehensive cancer program. Ranked nationally for thoracic surgery and oncology. Dedicated multidisciplinary team for pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma with active clinical trial enrollment.
NCI DesignatedPleuralPeritonealClinical Trials
University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center
Cleveland, OH
NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center at Case Western Reserve. Specialized thoracic oncology and mesothelioma program with access to cutting-edge treatment options.
NCI ComprehensivePleuralThoracic Surgery
Ohio State Comprehensive Cancer Center
Columbus, OH
NCI-designated program serving central Ohio. Advanced thoracic surgery, radiation therapy, and mesothelioma clinical trials. The James Cancer Hospital at Ohio State.
NCI ComprehensivePleuralPeritoneal
National Top Programs β€” 2025–2026
UT MD Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, TX
Dedicated Thoracic Center with the largest clinical trial program globally. Consistently ranked #1. The standard against which all mesothelioma programs are measured.
PleuralPeritonealClinical Trials
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, NY
Pioneered lung-sparing surgical approaches for pleural mesothelioma. Global leader in thoracic oncology research and volume.
PleuralLung-Sparing Surgery
Dana-Farber / Brigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, MA
Home of the world's first International Mesothelioma Program (IMP). Leading EPP surgical expertise. VA-affiliated.
PleuralIMPVeteransEPP Surgery
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, MN
Elite thoracic surgery division with team-based approach to complex cases. Geographically accessible for many Ohio patients.
PleuralComplex Cases
UCLA Medical Center / Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Los Angeles, CA
Innovative lung-sparing surgeries and a world-renowned mesothelioma program. VA-affiliated through the West LA VA β€” relevant for Navy and military exposure cases.
PleuralVeterans
UChicago Medicine
Chicago, IL
Global leader in peritoneal mesothelioma. Pioneered and refined the Sugarbaker Procedure / HIPEC for abdominal mesothelioma. Highly accessible from Ohio.
PeritonealHIPECSugarbaker
Moffitt Cancer Center
Tampa, FL
One of the largest U.S. mesothelioma programs by patient volume. HIPEC expertise for peritoneal disease.
PleuralPeritonealHIPEC
Mount Sinai Hospital β€” Selikoff Centers
New York, NY
Named for Irving Selikoff, whose research defined asbestos disease as a public health crisis. Decades of specialized research and the 9/11 first responder program.
PleuralResearch9/11 Responders

Workers' Compensation & Asbestos-Related Diseases

Ohio workers diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease may have rights under multiple legal systems simultaneously. Workers' compensation and civil litigation serve different purposes β€” understanding both is essential to maximizing recovery.

Mesothelioma

Malignant mesothelioma is caused by asbestos exposure and carries the longest latency of any occupational disease β€” typically 20 to 50 years from first exposure to diagnosis. Ohio courts recognize it as a compensable asbestos-related disease. Civil suits against product manufacturers are the primary recovery path.

Asbestosis

Progressive scarring of the lung tissue caused by chronic asbestos inhalation. Asbestosis qualifies for Ohio workers' compensation as a scheduled occupational disease and may support civil claims against manufacturers of the products that caused exposure. Both claims can proceed simultaneously.

Asbestos-Related Lung Cancer

Occupational asbestos exposure is a recognized cause of lung cancer independent of smoking history. Ohio workers' compensation covers occupational lung cancer when asbestos exposure is a contributing cause. Separate civil claims against asbestos manufacturers are not barred by a workers' comp filing.

Pleural Disease

Pleural plaques, pleural thickening, and pleural effusions are asbestos markers that can progress to more serious disease. While workers' compensation eligibility depends on functional impairment, documented pleural disease strengthens future civil claims by establishing a clear exposure history.

Workers' Compensation

  • Covers medical expenses and partial wage replacement
  • No-fault system β€” fault of employer not required
  • Filed against your employer's insurer
  • Typically limited to economic damages only
  • Does not compensate pain and suffering
  • Ohio statute: Ohio Rev. Code Chapter 4123

Civil Lawsuit

  • Filed against product manufacturers, not your employer
  • Covers medical costs, lost income, pain & suffering
  • Access to 60+ asbestos bankruptcy trust funds
  • Ohio's current 2 years SOL runs from date of diagnosis
  • Both claims can proceed at the same time
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Connect With a Ohio Asbestos & Mesothelioma Attorney

A diagnosis of mesothelioma or an asbestos-related illness may entitle you and your family to significant compensation through asbestos trust funds and civil litigation. An experienced Ohio attorney can evaluate your case β€” at no cost to you.

  • Free case evaluation — no obligation to hire
  • No attorney fee unless we make a financial recovery
  • Statutes of limitations may limit the time you have to act
  • Trust fund claims, civil lawsuits, and VA benefits pursued simultaneously
Call: (314) 237-1720 Free consultation — available now
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Information published here is drawn from public court records, regulatory filings, and published medical literature. Rights Watch Media Group LLC is an independent media organization, not a law firm.