FMLA request for "complicated grief reaction"
System
5,885 Posts
Here's a first.... An ee's father died a week ago and she has used her 3 days bereavement plus 2 days of PTO for the first week she missed. She has now asked for FML based on a primary care physician's note stating that she is suffering from a complicated grief syndrome. The doctor is recommending she be out for an additional 4 weeks due to this condition. Would anyone approve leave based on this diagnosis? I feel badly that she's lost her father and taking this so hard but I also know she has a vacation scheduled this month that she no longer has the accrued time for. Any suggestions? I've considered requesting a 2nd opinion but by that time she'll be back.
Comments
It seems conceivable to me that someone diagnosed with a "complicated grief syndrome" might meet one or more of these criteria.
The doctor should jump at the opportunity for a new no hassle revenue stream!
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
And I've read somewhere that your second and third opinion people cannot be under contract to you or regularly utilized as your company's choice of clinics, unless I have that wrong.
I would agree with you if that was the fact situation. The employee doesn't just want a couple of extra days off. She's had a week off and now wants four more and who knows if the doctor will release her then. I think to ask for more than a month off without looking into it further opens the door to lots of potential abuse. The second opinion may give the employer a comfort level with the need for such a long leave and it just may be poor wording on the paperwork from the first doctor.
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
I don't think that 4 weeks is a long time if she was especially close to her parent. I wouldn't seek a second opinion. If she is eligible for STD send her the paperwork and make sure it gets in to the carrier. They will get the necessary documentation from her doctor.
We had an employee who's father passed away (very close to) and did not take a long enough time off to grieve. Her direct report was ready to write her up and terminate her for performance issues: moody, not concentrating on work, not as cheerful as usual, etc. That would have been much worse from an HR standpoint to deal with than allowing an extra little time off to cope!
A health care provider employed by the employer on a regular basis CANNOT issue the second opinion. If the first and second medical opinions differ, the employer has the right to require a third opinion (at the employer's expense) that would be final and binding. This third opinion can only be issued by a health care provider that is mutually agreed upon by the employee and employer.
Note: If the second opinion is accepted by the employer and the employer declines to authorize an FMLA leave, the employee does not have the right to request a third opinion and the employer is not obligated by the law to obtain a third opinion. However, there are risks involved in accepting a second or third opinion where it conflicts with employee’s own treating doctor’s initial certificate.
If you obtain a second opinion for what is basically a psychological issue, you will probably only get a new diagnosis of depression or something more tangible. You would end up granting the leave anyway, in my opinion.