Shock Treatment
SandiF
160 Posts
We have an employee who has been out on FMLA because she tried to commit suicide and has been recieving shock treatments. Her 12 weeks is up on November 7th. We had felt that she would not be released by her physician when her leave was up as we have kept in touch and she seems to still be having memory and concentration problems. Yesterday she told us that she thinks she will be back in time. She has told us how much her job means to her, and her doctor at one point told us that her job meant everything to her. If she is released to work, we are worried she will continue to have performance issues; she's never been one of our better employees and she has always struggled with mental stability.
If she is not performing as she should, we are worried about firing her. We are very concerned that she will try to commit suicide again. I know we'll need to look at performance issues as the reason to let her go, but we certainly don't want to be the cause of her hurting herself again.
We think the doctor may release her because he does know how much her job means to her, and he may be feeling that getting back to it will be good for her. Her job requires a lot of concentration and attention to detail. (We don't have a position she can do that is less demanding). Can we explain this to the physician to make sure he understands this? If she returns and we eventually have to let her go, how do we do that when we are concerned about what she may do to herself?
We currently have another employee who used up her FMLA leave and we are holding her job an additional 90 days. (She's waiting for a kidney transplant). Have we now set a precedent? What are the implications of ADA?
She may return and do a wonderful job; but we don't think this will happen. We don't want to be the cause of her doing something drastic, but we also need an employee who can perform the job.
Thank you in advance. You are a great group of people.
If she is not performing as she should, we are worried about firing her. We are very concerned that she will try to commit suicide again. I know we'll need to look at performance issues as the reason to let her go, but we certainly don't want to be the cause of her hurting herself again.
We think the doctor may release her because he does know how much her job means to her, and he may be feeling that getting back to it will be good for her. Her job requires a lot of concentration and attention to detail. (We don't have a position she can do that is less demanding). Can we explain this to the physician to make sure he understands this? If she returns and we eventually have to let her go, how do we do that when we are concerned about what she may do to herself?
We currently have another employee who used up her FMLA leave and we are holding her job an additional 90 days. (She's waiting for a kidney transplant). Have we now set a precedent? What are the implications of ADA?
She may return and do a wonderful job; but we don't think this will happen. We don't want to be the cause of her doing something drastic, but we also need an employee who can perform the job.
Thank you in advance. You are a great group of people.
Comments
Yes you are setting a precedent with allowing your employee waiting for a kidney transplant an extra ninety days - not just for this FMLA but for all of them.
Absolutely treat her like any other employee which means documenting poor performance (but don't go on a witch hunt to get rid of her). Make your documentation factual and fair and do not refer to her absence or illness.
Yes, the presidence is now set. You must allow her 90 days in addition to her leave also.
Good luck.
I disagree with others about the way precedents develop and are to be followed. Precedents revolve around 'similarities'. Simply because your company made a business decision to extend a period of absence in one situation by no means obligates you to recognize that extension period as a new company practice or policy for all other situations.
This employee will probably be ADA protected at the exhaustion of her FMLA, unless she CANNOT work with accommodation and, through that interractive process, the company must make a decision on the reasonableness of that; but, the condition that allowed her FMLA absence is not part of the equation.
An employee who wants to return to work - desperately it appears - may fail to report exactly what the job entails and/or the problems it was giving her previously - and at times the job description gives leeway to do so. I never expected to have to explain to a doctor that a heavy equipment operator can't just hop into the piece of equipment like it's a 1/2 ton Chevy.