Off Duty Injury
![LindaS](http://blr-hrforums.elasticbeanstalk.com/plugins/DefaultAvatars/design/BlueAvatar.jpg)
I have an employee who apparently fell off a roof this past weekend. This AM the injury was brought to my attention as was the fact that this EE has limited use of his right arm. He works in a set-up position and is responsible for ensuring machines are properly, and safely, set-up before an operator begins working on it.
I have been approached by two EEs expressing concern over his inability to tighten bolts appropriately and having to have another set-up person do this task.
I spoke with the EE this AM who stated that he had seen a physician and was released to full duty. He states that the physician told him they no longer put arms in slings and there was nothing they could do for him. He also stated that he refused any pain medication. As I was talking with him I could visibly see that he is favoring the arm and holding it as if it were in a sling.
I spoke with the supervisor who feels that nothing needs to be done as any task this EE is unable to complete can be done by someone else. I have obvious safety and possible W/C concerns. I'm thinking of requiring him to go in and be seen to determine his fitness for duty but since this is not a work related injury I'm concerned about potential privacy issues.
What do you think? Should I send him home until he returns with something in writing?
I have been approached by two EEs expressing concern over his inability to tighten bolts appropriately and having to have another set-up person do this task.
I spoke with the EE this AM who stated that he had seen a physician and was released to full duty. He states that the physician told him they no longer put arms in slings and there was nothing they could do for him. He also stated that he refused any pain medication. As I was talking with him I could visibly see that he is favoring the arm and holding it as if it were in a sling.
I spoke with the supervisor who feels that nothing needs to be done as any task this EE is unable to complete can be done by someone else. I have obvious safety and possible W/C concerns. I'm thinking of requiring him to go in and be seen to determine his fitness for duty but since this is not a work related injury I'm concerned about potential privacy issues.
What do you think? Should I send him home until he returns with something in writing?
Comments
DO it now and not later!
PORK
Second of all, the supervisor needs some additional training (if I was sarcastic I would say in common sense). If the supervisior has to assign someone else to the ee's job then obviously the supervisor must believe that the ee is not up to the job. Therefore, the ee should not be working.
I then contacted the EE (his shift was already done for the day) and informed him that he needed to return with a doctor's release before we could allow him back on his job. He said that he understood but later showed up at the supervisor's home, obviously under the influence of alcohol (after just pleading guilty to a DWI and having only an occupational license but that is a whole other story) asking what the "story" was. The supervisor told him to get a doctor's release, he said that he would and is not here yet today - I'm assuming he's going to the doctor's office but we'll see.
Thanks for the advice. Things would be so much easier if we DID have some sort of "company physician" for these instances!!
The protection the release offers you, for one, is this: If the employee later claims aggravation or injury to that body part, your comp attorney (after you give it to him) has in hand the medical release stating that he was capable of performing the job and was released to full duty. The worst thing you can have (and tell your bonehead supervisor and manager this) is to allow him on the shop floor, the injury is exacerbated or he does not 'tighten nuts' properly, and someone else is injured. He then has a fine claim that 'Hey, the woman returned me to the job. She knew I fell of the house. They put me to work knowing I had a medical problem.'
A setup job is critical not only to quality, but the safety of operators.
These are the EXACT reasons I gave to both the plant manager and the supervisor as to WHY we needed the physician's release.
Thanks
When you have time, get from an attorney or a comp person some dollar amounts which represent: losing the tip of a finger, rotator cuff surgery, slip and fall with MRI and three weeks off work, the true cost of a set up man being off work for six weeks including replacement, lost time, comp payment of wages, perhaps overtime for somebody else, etc.
One of our biggest struggles is overcoming the management mentality that every employee needs to be constantly on production time, rarely if ever clocked to training, always at work, always available for mandatory overtime, no machine ever down even for necessary repair, no time to mop up oil spills, no time to fix ladders, to hell with the fork-truck that needs repair, fix the bare wire later and 'let em have their own damned picnic somewhere else'.
"Life is a tragedy when seen in close-up, but a comedy in long-shot."
Charlie Chaplin
The EE just came into the office with a doctor's slip keeping him off work for a minimum of 5 days but he also has to be seen by a specialist for possible surgery.
My comment to him was, "Well I guess you hurt yourself worse than you thought". His response was, "Yeah". While he didn't come out and admit that he hadn't previously been seen by a physician, the point was obvious. He will be stopping back tomorrow after going to the specialist.
Part of me wants to go back to the plant manager and supervisor with an "I told ya so" but I will refrain.
Thanks for the advice. I feel very good about the direction I took this and feel good that the EE is getting the medical treatment he needs.