Supplying Aspirin/Tylenol, etc
rhwalter
1 Post
I have a medium sized vending company. We have noticed a trend lately of employer's taking a stance against maintaining a "Company Aspirin Bottle" and allowing employees to draw from it. At the same time, they are asking us to supply them in our vending machines.
First, what are the liabilities associated with an employer providing gratis over the counter analgesics to their employees?
Next, is the liability for such an act mitigated if the employee purchases the same item from a vending machine on the employer's premises.
Finally, are we the vending company assuming some mantle of liability by placing the requested items in our vending machines.
I am the CEO of the vending company, so I have multiple levels of interest here. The original question arose in trying to decide whether or not we should provide the prepackaged products we sell in the vending machines to our employees either for a charge or in our company's own vending machine.
Thanks for any response. I am glad I found this forum as there are many great topics under discussion.
Regards,
RHWalter
First, what are the liabilities associated with an employer providing gratis over the counter analgesics to their employees?
Next, is the liability for such an act mitigated if the employee purchases the same item from a vending machine on the employer's premises.
Finally, are we the vending company assuming some mantle of liability by placing the requested items in our vending machines.
I am the CEO of the vending company, so I have multiple levels of interest here. The original question arose in trying to decide whether or not we should provide the prepackaged products we sell in the vending machines to our employees either for a charge or in our company's own vending machine.
Thanks for any response. I am glad I found this forum as there are many great topics under discussion.
Regards,
RHWalter
Comments
As the vending machine company, you are only providing the service. The employees could buy the medication from you or run down the street to the local drug or grocery store. No store monitors how much aspirin they sell to a customer, so from that standpoint you should be fine too.
So can ibuprofen, etc.
At what point does our fear get in the way of providing a productive work environment?
Can anyone cite for me an actual case in which an employee successfully sued his employer for having aspirin in a vending machine?
[email]paulknoch@hotmail.com[/email]
I would put a little smiley face here but I cant figure out that high level tech stuff.
[email]paulknoch@hotmail.com[/email]
Christy Reeder
Website Managing Editor
[url]www.HRhero.com[/url]
>"Emotion icon short cuts" link just above your message box>
>Christy Reeder
Back when I was just starting out, we didn't have emoticon links - we had to type all emoticons in by hand. You kids don't know how easy you have it these days!
Christy Reeder
Website Managing Editor
[url]www.HRhero.com[/url]
>>"Emotion icon short cuts" link just above your message box>
>>Christy Reeder
>
>Back when I was just starting out, we didn't have emoticon links - we
>had to type all emoticons in by hand. You kids don't know how easy you
>have it these days!
Don't know your age WOCOFrank, but, when some of us started out there was no such thing as 'links' OR emoticons. Best I cold get was an IBM Selectric II with no correction typeover feature. I would have called the state asylum if somebody had suggested to me that one day we would be able to type stuff into a screen like a little TV and people all across the country would immediately see it and type a message back and you could even tell when they were smiling!