The Heart for Asbestos Associated Illness, or CARD Clinic, in Libby, Montana, offers free lung screenings for respiration points and cancers tied to asbestos publicity. CARD’s doorways had been shuttered by a lawsuit introduced by BNSF Railway on behalf of the federal authorities.
Aaron Bolton/Montana Public Radio
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Aaron Bolton/Montana Public Radio
Dozens of ft of tubing join Gayla Benefield to her oxygen machine so she will be able to stroll from room to room inside her dwelling on the picturesque Kootenai River, surrounded by the Cupboard Mountains.
Like many individuals who dwell on this distant city about 80 miles from the U.S.-Canada border, the 81-year-old Benefield has asbestosis, or scarring of the lungs from asbestos publicity.
Her father labored at a now-closed mine that provided many of the world’s vermiculite, a mineral with all kinds of makes use of in insulation, fireproofing, and even gardening.
The mine closed in 1990, and in 1999, a Seattle Submit-Intelligencer investigation publicly revealed the connection between the asbestos-contaminated mineral and the rising variety of sick Libby residents.
Benefield remembered the white mud that lined her father’s garments when he received dwelling from work, and she or he discovered later that the entire household had been uncovered to asbestos, a tiny fiber that lodges within the lining of the lungs.
“Ultimately, that scarring will absolutely encompass your lungs,” Benefield mentioned, “and slowly strangle you.”
The Environmental Safety Company declared components of Libby a Superfund website in 2002.
Seven years later, the company declared a public well being emergency for the city — a primary in U.S. historical past.
A research discovered that 694 Libby residents had died of an asbestos-related trigger from 1979 to 2011. Moreover, well being suppliers within the city of three,200 estimate that 1 in 10 residents have an asbestos-related sickness.
That estimate is from the Heart for Asbestos Associated Illness, or CARD, a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit clinic that has supplied free lung screenings for locals.
The clinic, which operates primarily via U.S. authorities funding, has screened greater than 8,900 folks. As a result of asbestos-related illness signs can take 30 years or longer to look, almost a 3rd of the clinic’s screenings are for brand spanking new sufferers, in keeping with a 2024 CARD report.
However now, Libby residents can not get that care as a result of a judgment in a lawsuit introduced by BNSF Railway closed the CARD clinic in Might.
Gayla Benefield sits at her kitchen desk in her dwelling simply exterior of Libby, MT. Benefield struggles to breathe as a result of her lungs had been scarred by asbestos. Benefield helped begin the Heart for Asbestos Associated Illness, or CARD Clinic, to assist folks get identified. She mentioned earlier generations like her dad and mom died with out figuring out what was killing them.
Aaron Bolton/Montana Public Radio
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Aaron Bolton/Montana Public Radio
BNSF used a whistleblower legislation to sue the clinic on behalf of the federal authorities. The railroad firm is seizing the clinic’s property in an try to gather roughly $2.9 million, its portion of the courtroom judgement and lawyer charges.
Clinic leaders are combating the courtroom order and have vowed to reopen its doorways, however the lawsuit is not the one risk to the clinic’s survival.
That is as a result of the federal grant that gives 80% of the clinic’s working income is on an inventory of cuts the Trump administration is contemplating.
If the $3 million grant is lower, the clinic would probably shut for good, CARD govt director Tracy McNew mentioned.
The grant was frozen then unfrozen, after the Workplace of Administration and Funds issued then rescinded a memo freezing grants having to do with nongovernmental organizations, packages centered on variety, fairness and inclusion, and different points.
However White Home officers have mentioned they’ll proceed reviewing these grants for potential cuts, leaving McNew unsure of the grant’s standing whilst clinic officers — and Division of Justice attorneys — battle in courtroom to recuperate the CARD belongings seized within the BNSF lawsuit.
The Workplace of Administration and Funds, the White Home, and the Division of Well being and Human Providers didn’t reply to NPR and KFF Well being Information’ request for touch upon the standing of the clinic’s grant.
Reducing the grant won’t be straightforward, mentioned Tim Bechtold, an lawyer who represented the clinic within the BNSF case.
The Inexpensive Care Act gave Libby asbestos sufferers entry to Medicare and known as on the federal authorities to supply grants to fund diagnostic companies for them.
The CARD Clinic in Libby closed after a lawsuit introduced by BNSF Railway on behalf of the federal authorities. After the courtroom issued a roughly $6 million judgement, the railway seized the CARD clinic’s property to gather a portion of the judgement as a whistleblower. The clinic is now combating that transfer in federal courtroom.
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In 2020, the Montana Supreme Courtroom dominated that BNSF might be held chargeable for spreading asbestos alongside its tracks when the railroad shipped shipped vermiculite mined in Libby throughout the nation.
The yr earlier than, the railroad sued underneath the False Claims Act, arguing that CARD defrauded the federal government by erroneously diagnosing sufferers and serving to them apply for Medicare advantages.
The legislation permits personal events to tackle fraud circumstances on behalf of the federal authorities if federal prosecutors decline to take the case. Cash awarded in these circumstances goes again to the federal authorities, however personal events maintain a portion of the winnings.
A jury sided with BNSF’s claims that CARD falsified the information of greater than 300 sufferers who obtained federal advantages.
CARD officers mentioned these sufferers didn’t obtain a prognosis of asbestos-related illness, however the clinic decided them eligible for Medicare underneath the ACA based mostly on irregular radiology readings.
In an announcement to NPR and KFF Well being Information, BNSF denied the lawsuit was an try to keep away from authorized legal responsibility for asbestos contamination alongside its tracks.
In 2023, the clinic filed for chapter, citing the BNSF lawsuit. In Might, BNSF persuaded a county courtroom to permit the corporate to grab almost all of CARD’s property to gather its share of the roughly $6 million courtroom judgment. It took management of almost every little thing, from the clinic’s constructing to its garden mower.
The federal authorities is coming to CARD’s protection. In a courtroom submitting, the workplace of the U.S. Legal professional for Montana, Kurt Alme, mentioned that as a result of CARD property was largely bought with federal grant funding, BNSF can’t seize it.
The case has moved to federal courtroom and the decide is predicted to rule on whether or not BNSF can seize CARD belongings to gather its portion of the judgment.
Within the meantime, CARD sufferers should look elsewhere for screening and remedy, companies that might be troublesome to seek out.
Diagnosing illnesses linked to asbestos
Diagnosing folks with asbestos-related illness or displaying that different situations are tied to asbestos publicity requires experience, mentioned Robert Kratzke, an oncologist on the College of Minnesota who research cancers tied to asbestos.
“Most physicians can be modestly clueless about what to search for,” he mentioned.
Kratzke defined X-rays or CT scans have to be carried out in a selected means and skim by specialised medical doctors, often known as B readers, to diagnose sufferers.
Kratzke mentioned rebuilding the experience of the CARD clinic can be troublesome in a small city like Libby.
“It could be very, very exhausting for the physicians and hospitals in Libby to observe these folks as they might have to be adopted for the remainder of their lives,” Kratzke mentioned.
Jenan Swenson is the one one among Gayla Benefield’s 5 youngsters who hasn’t but been identified with an asbestos-related illness.
She obtained the outcomes of her final screening on the CARD clinic the day earlier than it closed in Might. For now, the 62-year-old is within the clear.
Swenson expects to finally develop respiration issues from her asbestos publicity as a toddler. Her mother, for whom she is a caregiver, additionally wants ongoing screenings for lung most cancers.
She worries they’re going to must journey out of state to seek out that care if the CARD clinic does not reopen, which Swenson mentioned they can not afford.
She does not assume her household would be the just one unable to entry care elsewhere.
“There’s going to in all probability be lots of people simply misplaced on the market with no place to go,” Swenson mentioned.
This text comes from NPR’s reporting partnership with Montana Public Radio and KFF Well being Information.









