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Good Faith Interactive Process

Jury Awards $2.6 Million to Pharmacist with “Needle Phobia”

[01/28/15]

Posted on January 28, 2015 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Have you ever heard of trypanophobia? If not, it means a fear of needles, which, in this case, resulted in a jury verdict of $2.6 million to a Rite Aid pharmacist whose fear of needles prevented him from giving flu shot immunizations as a required part of his job. Is “Needle Phobia” an ADA... READ MORE

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Reasonable Accommodation – Just Assign Wheelchair Transport Duties to an Orderly?

[10/29/14]

Posted on October 29, 2014 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Was Job Restructuring Reasonable?  The Jury Will Decide A hairdresser at a nursing home quit her job following surgery when her boss failed to consider assigning her duties of transporting wheelchair bound residents to the beauty salon to orderlies.  She filed an ADA suit claiming a failure to reasonably accommodate her disability.  The nursing... READ MORE

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Sleeping on the Job – Employer Gets a Wake-Up Call

[01/16/14]

Posted on January 16, 2014 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

An employee who is caught sleeping on the job will usually end up getting fired. Indeed, this is what happened when a night shift employee was caught sleeping numerous times. The employee was given progressive warnings, including a final warning, before getting caught the last time and was fired. This seems pretty straightforward; however,... READ MORE

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Medical Leave Up? Ask for More Says the EEOC

[05/21/13]

Posted on May 21, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Your Leave Is Up – Sorry but You’re Fired Many employers have medical leave policies.  Most of those policies allow leave for a maximum duration often three to six months or even up to a year.  The FMLA, of course, guarantees job protection for 12 weeks.  But what is an employer to do if... READ MORE

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Using Restraint in Your Job – Very Rare but Still Essential

[02/04/13]

Posted on February 4, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Sometimes the important things that an employee may be required to do in a job almost never happen.  Take for example a worker at a juvenile detention center who might one day have to physically restrain a violent youth who might be causing trouble at the facility.  It doesn’t happen often, but it certainly could.  Does... READ MORE

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Deaf Lifeguard Has a Case Under the ADA

[01/24/13]

Posted on January 24, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Jennifer H. Gonzalez

A recent federal court opinioncourt opinion highlights the need for employers to evaluate employee requests for reasonable accommodation on an individualized basis – even where, at first glance, an effective accommodation may not be readily apparent.  The ADA is, after all, intended to overcome employment decisions based on stereotypes. A Deaf Applicant Seeks a Lifeguard... READ MORE

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Bad Back and Shared Lifting – A Burden Too Heavy for This Plaintiff

[01/16/13]

Posted on January 16, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Is Shared Lifting a “Reasonable” Accommodation? Employees who suffer from a bad back and have lifting restrictions always present a challenge to employers who attempt to accommodate those restrictions.  It’s discrimination under the ADA if the employer fails to make a reasonable accommodation to the known physical or mental limitations of an otherwise qualified individual with a... READ MORE

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Do We Have to Give Preference to a Disabled Employee When There is a Vacant Position?

[09/11/12]

Posted on September 11, 2012 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

The answer to that question now is YES, so long as that person is “qualified” for the job and the transfer isn’t an “undue hardship.” A significant change of course on competition for vacant positions as an ADA accommodation Reversing twelve years of decisions that allowed an employer to pick the best applicant for a... READ MORE

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Unpredictable Seizures – Mammography Tech was a “Direct Threat” and “Not Qualified”

[05/18/12]

Posted on May 18, 2012 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

The ADA requires employers to attempt to reasonably accommodate qualified individuals with a disability.  But what about a Certified Mammography Technician who suffered 14 epileptic seizures on the job in a two year period? In this case a federal court held that this hospital employee was not qualified and also presented a direct threat... READ MORE

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Employee who fails to return from FMLA can be fired, but …

[04/10/12]

Posted on April 10, 2012 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Employers frustrated by employees who fail to report to work after their FMLA benefits have expired may be in luck!  Earlier this year, the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland held that an employer may terminate an employee who fails to report to work on his return-to-work date. READ MORE

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