Copies of Hearing Tests
Sunny
259 Posts
I thought I'd seen everything. We recently terminated an employee for refusing to take a drug test following a forklift accident (property damage but no injury.) This individual had previously undergone audiometric testing as part of our yearly program. His results were strange - and our provider advised me to have him retested since his test results could only be valid if he had a tire blow up in his face ten minutes before the test. (In other words she thought he was faking.) The retest provider indicated on her report that the test results had very little validity. She told me on the phone that she was relatively certain he was faking. Now this employee is demanding copies of his hearing tests. Obviously he is planning to sue based on hearing loss. He had been in attendance trouble for some time before his termination. Do we have to supply him with the test results?
Comments
The employee can file a claim regardless of whether or not he as a copy of the hearing test results. Once he files the claim you will more than likely have to provide a copy to him, his attorney, and the agency through which he files his claims.
The strength of you case lies in the opinions of two audiometric testers that it is very apparent, based on the results, that this employee did not complete the test in good faith.
Does you state law require you to provide copies of personnel / medical records to employees who ask for it? If it does, then I would give him copies and prepare to defend the charge / workers' comp claim.
It looks as if everyone has provided you with some good ideas. PLease let us know how this one turns out. Hhopefully I won't have this come up but, you never know
Good luck.
I just could not resist adding a war story about faking test results (goodness, am I turning into Don D?). I once represented the employer in a case where an employee claimed that due to the persistent harassment by his supervisor he was sent into a serious depression. He was a psychiatrist himself, but we sent him to our expert to be tested. The expert performed many tests on him, and the results came back that a person in a coma would have faired better! This is because due to the law of averages and it being a multiple choice test, some people would get the right answer once in a while, whereas this guy missed every single question. So, because he thought he knew a thing or two about psychology, he incorrectly answered every question - but it backfired because it proved that he was completely faking! Isn't it amazing what some employees will try to do?
disability - and was terminated....