1950-1980
Construction
1
About Ceiling Tiles
Ceiling Tiles was one of many products that contained asbestos during the 20th century. Acoustic ceiling tiles contained asbestos fibers. Damage or removal exposed building occupants.. Manufacturers added asbestos to these products for its heat resistance, durability, and insulating properties.
Workers who manufactured, installed, maintained, or removed ceiling tiles were at significant risk of asbestos exposure. When these materials were cut, drilled, sanded, or disturbed, microscopic asbestos fibers became airborne and could be inhaled.
Who Was Exposed?
Several occupations faced elevated exposure risks from ceiling tiles:
Industries Affected
Ceiling Tiles was commonly used in these industries:
Asbestos Exposure Timeline
Understanding when asbestos was used in ceiling tiles helps establish exposure history:
- 1930s-1940s: Asbestos use began expanding in building materials and industrial products
- 1950s-1970s: Peak usage period when most asbestos-containing products were manufactured
- 1970s-1980s: Regulations began limiting asbestos use as health risks became public
- 1989: EPA attempted to ban most asbestos products (later overturned in court)
- Today: Legacy asbestos remains in millions of buildings built before 1980
Health Risks
Exposure to asbestos fibers from ceiling tiles can cause four main diseases. Mesothelioma is an aggressive cancer of the lung, heart, or abdominal lining and the signature disease of asbestos exposure. Asbestos-related lung cancer risk climbs with exposure and multiplies sharply when combined with a smoking history. Asbestosis is chronic scarring of lung tissue that builds as fibers accumulate in the lungs. Pleural plaques are calcified areas on the lung lining that often show up on chest imaging decades before any symptoms appear.
Symptoms may not appear until 20-50 years after initial exposure, making early detection difficult.
Companies That Made This Product
Multiple manufacturers produced asbestos-containing ceiling tiles throughout the 20th century. Many of these companies have been sued by mesothelioma victims and have established bankruptcy trusts to compensate claimants.
An experienced mesothelioma attorney can help identify which manufacturers made the specific products you were exposed to and determine available compensation sources.
Browse asbestos companies →Compensation Options
If you were exposed to asbestos through ceiling tiles and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma, compensation typically comes from one or more of four sources. Asbestos trust funds were established by bankrupt manufacturers to pay qualified claimants. Personal injury lawsuits target companies still in business whose products contributed to exposure. VA benefits apply to veterans whose exposure happened during military service. Workers' compensation is available in some states for occupational exposure, on top of the other routes.
Learn about legal options →