Giving employee asprin
Evswife
15 Posts
One of our managers had an employee come into her office this morning complaining of chest pains and tightness in the chest. She was in obvious distress. Her first response was to give her an asprin. She then asked the employee if she wanted to go to the hospital, she agreed. The manager called the employee's spouse and he met them at the hospital. The manager just received a call from the spouse that the employee had in fact suffered a heart attack.
Here is my question. We were told by a previous HR Director to take all pain releiver out of the company first aid kit. That we could not distribute medication to employees...not even asprin. Is this true? This manager giving an employee an asprin could have very well saved her life. Any info on this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Here is my question. We were told by a previous HR Director to take all pain releiver out of the company first aid kit. That we could not distribute medication to employees...not even asprin. Is this true? This manager giving an employee an asprin could have very well saved her life. Any info on this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Comments
Consequently, we do provide pain relievers (individually packaged doses provided by our first aid provider) to our employees. We don't dispense them, but the employees know where they are and can help themselves. If an employee has a headache, I'd much rather he grab a couple of aspirin and go back to work than go home because he's not feeling well.
The circumstances outlined in your post, in my opinion, are a perfect example of a situation in which the risk of exposure to liability was far outweighed by the benefit to be derived from giving the employee aspirin. I'll defend that lawsuit any day.
My $0.02 worth......
The Balloonman
He was trying to extort money from Tylenol - a couple of copy cats came along - all tylenol was removed from the shelves - and eventually the tamper proof container was legislated.
We make aspirin, tylenol, etc, available in a central location, EEs know where it's kept, and they are free to help themselves as they need.
The one point I would add is that our policy manual clearly instructs staff that the FIRST thing they should do if they or another staff member seems to be seriously ill is to CALL 911 (BEFORE they call HR, or call their supervisor, or take an aspirin).
Since your EE apparently did suffer a heart attack, getting her to the hospital in a timely way was of the essence in saving her life in this case. Next time, I would just suggest reversing the order of actions in response: call 911 first; then give the EE an aspirin if they want one (and if the 911 rep says it's OK to do so).
I used to work in a place with an older workforce, and I have dealt with 5 heart attacks. In EACH case they did not want an ambulance called. In each case I had the ambulance called, the HR staff was well versed and understood that I wanted them there asap. My goal was to NEVER perform mouth to mouth on an employee!
My $0.02 worth,
The Balloonman