ADA employee with frequent accidents
Jarrett
13 Posts
An employee has approximately one fall per month and occassionally has an injury related to accident that requires the employee to go home for the rest of the day. We worry about the employee's safety, but want to be accomodating as possible. We have met accommodations, but cannot prevent the medical condition leading to the falls. When is the threat of injury considered severe enough to terminate under ADA?
Comments
Here's a good article on this topic from New Mexico Employment Law Letter:
[url]http://www.hrhero.com/q&a/heartattack.shtml[/url]
James Sokolowski
Senior Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers
We have her on intermittent FMLA for time missed relative to a seizure. At what point could she also come under ADA? I'm not sure what accommodation(s)might be appropriate.
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
If you determine she is ADA qualified and needs reasonable accommodation either in place of the time off or as a supplement to it, contact the Job Accommodation Network in Virginia. They have a website. Also, ask the employee what she would recommend that would allow her to perofrm the essential duties of the job; contact her doctor and get some ideas--send him/her a job description so that he/she knows what is reqired of the employee. You may want to try some support organizations for people with epilepsy, in addition.