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Nah. Not at all. There wasnt a requirement to. Just like most brake companies werent doing it, since asbestos is an inhalation hazard and you through normal use of putting on the skin, wouldnt have to worry about that. I am with j and j on this one.
Talc is not a carcinogen from skin contact. People arent getting lung cancer from it. If they start getting it, i will be first to admit they messed up.
A wise dodge. But a sad, money loving, baby hating dodge.
Direct contact between asbestos and the skin poses a risk of the material entering the body or the blood stream, and there has been a strong link between skin contact with asbestos and mesothelioma of the abdomen known as peritoneal mesothelioma with the most common mesothelioma diagnosis being pleural mesothelioma.
https://mesowatch.com/asbestos-skin-exposure/