"not known at this time"?
Irie
482 Posts
What do you do with Certifications of Health Care Providers when the doctor doesn't complete the "If yes, give the probable duration:" section or writes in "not known at this time"? Also, what if they don't complete the "...additional treatments" section. Do you send it back and insist they complete this section?
I just received one that says, "not known at this time please contact Dr. ________." Like I'm going to contact the doctor!
If you send it back they'll probably just return it with the same information. This is so frustrating and I have other things to do besides be a babysitter for FMLA. (Thanks for letting me vent.)
I just received one that says, "not known at this time please contact Dr. ________." Like I'm going to contact the doctor!
If you send it back they'll probably just return it with the same information. This is so frustrating and I have other things to do besides be a babysitter for FMLA. (Thanks for letting me vent.)
Comments
Employees usually call and explain that they don't know how often they will need to be out, or for how long, and I simply remind them that it is an estimate, and can be based on their past history with the condition. Miraculously, all certifications now are being sent in or eventually sent it with all required documentation.
As long as you are consistent with applying this practice for everyone, it works great. A little hassle in the beginning with extra paperwork, but it is work it to be able to have the schedule for us. That way you can at least hold the employee accountable to only a certain amount of time off.
Hope that helps! Good luck.
Anyway, I just sent out a "hey your 15 business days are almost up and if I don't get something by Tuesday you're fired" letter. Oh well.
The employee "belongs" to the supervisor. In my company, the supervisor can call them and gently urge them to get their forms in or the leave will be denied, they won't get STD benefits, (claim will be denied if they are no longer employed at the time of the disability) and they lose all seniority if they want to come back at the end of what would have been their leave.
If the employee still fails to return the forms, I send the letter.
In our area, there is a big shortage of qualified childcare teachers. Our industry has pretty high staff turnover in general and we are constantly looking for quality staff. We do whatever we can to keep people, and the supervisor's phone call often helps.
True, with some employees we'd rather just let the deadline expire and deny the leave, but in most cases, we want to keep the employee, so we try to be consistent. It's worth it.