Can an employer tell you to bring a note from your Dr...

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...that says you are OK to perform your job as a result of you having a seizure? I don't mean saying you are OK to drive. I just mean that you can do your job. My Neurologist is out of town and my employer is asking for a note that I can come back to work. This same employer allowed 4 employees with DUI's to come back to work and do everything on their job other than drive. Sounds like discrimination to me. This employer doesn't sound like they are getting legal advice.
 
Yes they can. They can ask to see if you are competent to do the tasks needed at your work, and then MUST make reasonable adjustments for you to continue work.

A DUI is not the same as epilepsy. Epilepsy is chronic, and can happen at any moment without choice. a DUI is with choice and does not happen without warning. Your employer can ban them from driving, even if they still have their license, but cannot stop them from doing their job unless they are caught drinking on the job.
 
Sounds like he is trying to cover any liability issues if something were to happen to you to you as a result of a seizure at work. But he may have the right to ask for a note. The below is from http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/epilepsy.html

"May an employer require an employee on leave because of epilepsy to have a medical exam or provide documentation before allowing her to return to work?"

Yes, if the employer has a reasonable belief that the employee may be unable to perform her job or may pose a direct threat to herself or others. However, the employer may obtain only the information needed to make an assessment of the employee's present ability to perform her job and to do so safely.


Example: A pool cleaner called his supervisor on Monday morning and told him he was taking sick leave because he had a seizure over the weekend -- his second in six months. Given the safety risks associated with the pool cleaner's job, the employer may ask him to have a medical exam or provide medical documentation indicating that he can safely perform his job without posing a direct threat before allowing him to return to work.

Example: A cashier, who has occasional nocturnal seizures, took two weeks off to adjust to a new medication. She works the day shift and never has been late for work, never has had difficulty performing her duties, and never has had a seizure on the job. The employer may not require the cashier to have a medical examination or ask her for medical documentation before allowing her to return to work because there is no indication that her epilepsy will prevent her from doing her job.

Example: A budget analyst with epilepsy has a seizure at work. She explains to her manager that following a seizure she is typically very tired and needs to rest for several hours. She says that she will be fine the next morning and will be back at work, but asks if she could call someone to drive her home and take off for the rest of the day. Because there is no reason to believe that the analyst will be unable to do her job or will pose a safety risk, the employer may not require her to submit a doctor's note clearing her to return to work the next day.
 
I have to provide a doctors letter every so often at work because I work with adults with learning disabilities and they need to check if I'm a risk.

Still waiting for the results of what they think of the latest one. Work only asked for information directly relating to my epilepsy though.
 
In a way I think they are just trying to cover their butts. They want to make sure that they know that you are able to do what ever it is that they want you to to without having to worry about having any accidents happening to you or to others.

My husband went through chemo and radiation for cancer he had a year ago and he needed a note from a dr inorder to beable to return to work.
 
...that says you are OK to perform your job as a result of you having a seizure? I don't mean saying you are OK to drive. I just mean that you can do your job. My Neurologist is out of town and my employer is asking for a note that I can come back to work. This same employer allowed 4 employees with DUI's to come back to work and do everything on their job other than drive. Sounds like discrimination to me. This employer doesn't sound like they are getting legal advice.
Yes they can - and should. I know this girl who worked at Walmart who had a seizure while up on a ladder stocking the top shelves, closer to the fluorescent lights. She came crashing down, flailing her arms & damaging/destroying other products on her way to the floor. Thankfully, she was alright, but she was fired from her job & there was nothing she could do about it because she had never provided HR with anything in writing from her doctor stating that she had epilepsy, limiting what she could do. For all they know, she could've been drunk or high that night. If they had known she could have seizures but made her climb a ladder anyway, THEN she would've had a case against them.
 
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