Should offer be withdrawn?
TinaL
16 Posts
During our pre-employment physical process, a new hire was informed she had a lump on her breast. She will have surgery to determine what the lump is and will not be able to work for about a month. This is a full time direct care position in a health care facility and we do consider it somewhat of a hardship to cover staffing. My instinct says to give her the month and hope it's nothing serious. But what if it is? I realize this probably doesn't fall under ADA at this time, but it could possibly in the future, right? Should we cut her loose now?
Comments
It is possible that the doctor was meeting his or her role as a doctor. Remember, even though he or she is employed to screen for employment purposes, the indivudal is still a doctor. Perhaps, he or she observed something that made him or her wonder. Maybe there's a medical profile that the doctor noticed the indivudal met that indicated the likelihood of cancerous lumps in the breast. Or, may be something he observed in the test results indicated a problem. Whatever.
I'm very sensitive to this type of situation. Years ago, I had to seek urgent care from my HMO for a medical issue. The urgent care doctor handled the urgency...and at the end, before he dismissed me, he ased if he could listen to my heart (the care I sought had nothing to do with my heart). He listened and then asked, "how long have you had an irregular heart beat?" I told him and he said, "I'd like to schedule you for some diagnostic exams. Subsequently they found that I had an aneurysm at my aortic valve that made it "incompetent" and I had the valve replaced. It was subsequently explained to me that the urgent care doctor saw that I fit a profile for what was called "Marfan's Syndrome" which invoves a defective aortic valve. But as it turned out, I didn't meet all of the conditions neccesary to say that I had Marfan's Syndrome. Nevertheless, the urgent care doctor "profiled" me and caught the aneurysm. That was over 16 years ago.
So, the company and of course the woman should be grateful for the doctor doing more than just the occupational health assessment, but meeting his role as a trained medical practitioner dedicated to helping people.
It reminds me of a doctor's visit I had to a dermatologist. I had a growth near my eyebrow. When the doctor came in to the examining room he said, "Ok take your clothes off and put this gown on". I said, "All this for a growth on my face?" He shrugged and said, "Sometimes it works." x:-)