Forged Dr's. Note:
njjel
1,235 Posts
I have every reason to believe that a doctor's note and FMLA Certification of Health brought in by one of our employee's is a forgery. I want to call the doctor's office and ascertain if this person is a patient of his and if he signed the note. Am I legal to do so?
Comments
At the hearing, we had no proof she forged the document, beyond our belief. She produced a letter from the office stating that while she did not have an appointment, the office was standing behind the excuse.
UC was denied.
What I would have done differently: Obtained approval from the ee to contact the dr's office (she refused-so we made our decision based on facts at hand)...with or without her approval, received some kind of written confirmation from the dr's office regarding that particular excuse. That would have been helpful at the hearing.
Recent caselaw suggests that employers are right to question these situations...but we should always tread lightly in areas of ee privacy.
I find the physician's help is willing to verify something the ee provided to us rather than being concerned about the disclousre of HIPAA protected information. If the attorney "dawgs" have their way they will soon have that door closed to us, too.
PORK
I would think that faxing what the employee gave you with the request to verify that it did actually come from the office would be okay. You may or may not get an answer from them.
Employees are getting very savvy about these kinds of "rights" they now have and are getting creative on how to bend the rules to their satisfaction. I am not surprised that some are resorting to forgery.
Think about it.
My $0.02 worth!
DJ The Balloonman
i mistyped in my earlier post. UC was granted by the referee since the forgery could not be proven by us...had the ee lost and appealed it could have been worse for us...since the bar of evidence gets greater.
We developed a new policy as a result of this case...no HR staff is to call a dr's office for information, unless the ee has provided written authorization...and even then, we want all medical related responses to be in writing.
The EE just filed an EEOC complaint stating that we discriminated against her because of her disability...and that she was wrongly terminated because we can't prove that she forged the document. xx( especially since the medical practice is now backing her up. We believe since they talked to us (and essentially violated HIPPA) they are concerned that she'll sue them too, so they're going along with the game.