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 Liverpool NHS Trust in court 
over deadly asbestos fibres 
A Liverpool NHS Trust has been fined £10,000 
after it emerged its workers may have been exposed to potentially deadly 
asbestos fibres.  The Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals 
NHS Trust was prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after the 
fibres were discovered in the basement of its offices at Derwent House on London 
Road in January 2013. 
 
Liverpool Magistrates' Court heard that the organisation had failed to act on a 
survey carried out in 2006 which identified that an area of the basement may 
contain asbestos, and recommended that its condition should be properly 
assessed.  A HSE investigation found that workers had regularly been 
visiting the basement to access patient records. 
 
The risk to them came to light on 9 January 2013 when the NHS Trust's health and 
safety manager noticed that the doors to an out of use goods lift in the 
basement were damaged. The lift doors contained asbestos, which meant there was 
a risk of exposure to those accessing the basement. 
 
A subsequent survey found that asbestos fibres were present in several different 
areas of the basement. 
 
The Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS Trust, of Prescot 
Street in Liverpool, was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £696 in prosecution 
costs after pleading guilty to 2 breaches of the Health and Safety at Work etc 
Act 1974, on 26 February 2015. 
 
Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Imran Siddiqui said:- "Around 
4,000 people die every year as a result of breathing in asbestos fibres, making 
it the biggest single cause of work related deaths in the UK. It's therefore 
vital that organisations take the risks from asbestos seriously. The Trust, in 
line with the 2006 survey, should have assumed asbestos was present in an area 
of the basement and taken appropriate action to make it safe for people working 
there.  Instead, workers were allowed to regularly visit the basement to 
access patient files increasing the risk of exposure to the potentially deadly 
fibres."  
 
Asbestos was extensively used as a building material in the 50's, 60's and 70's, but 
it becomes dangerous if it is broken up and fibres are released. Airborne fibres 
can become lodged in the lungs or digestive tract and can lead to lung cancer or 
other diseases, but symptoms may not appear for several decades. 
Information on how to work safely with asbestos is available at:- 
HSE.Gov.UK/Asbestos.  |