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Why the person isn't using sick days?
Nuances of substance use as illness and medical protections in the eyes of federal government, i.e. can you write a letter that states this person is "sick."
People can't get FMLA protections for SUDs, 'oh no I had relapse today guess I need to use my FMLA allowed time for my cocaine relapse' but protections exist by the ADA for doing AA/NA meetings and the like, and also for treatment.
Since the person isn't in treatment yet, and likely to be drinking, should that be protected by a dr note?
So the consensus is to write the note, which I intend. But what about the nuances of Laws, protections, etc. I.e. where are the forensic minded people. What do they say?
As you should. GI and Migraines are a Medical illness. That's established. Its what doctors do. You write the note.What? What are you talking about?
People literally get doctors notes for days off of work for all kinds of random stuff. I can go to my PCP saying I’ve got severe migraines and get a note saying I can’t go back to work until Monday no problem. **** I could probably do a telemedicine visit with some urgent care, tell them I’m crapping my brains out from some unspecified gastroenteritis and get them to write that I can’t come back to work for a few days.
People don't get notes for having a bad day feeling triggered, getting plastered, and saying, "Doc, I really have a bad hang over. Can you write me a note for my hangover? Oh, and for yesterday, because I was too intoxicated to work and stayed home."
This is the nuance I am trying to get at. The line of substance use disorder, intoxication, withdrawals, etc and where can we write a note?
Patient relapsed on alcohol.
Bed date in a few days for residential.
Wants a note from work for the few days leading up to admission.
Thoughts?
Correct. FMLA just assures your job is protected for up to 12 weeks. Pay would have to come from sick days/PTO or short-term disability.Regarding the sick days comment, my understanding is FMLA just guarantees that your job is safe, not that you're paid for the time. Plenty of places make you use your sick time if you want to be paid for any of your FMLA time off. (Please correct me if this is wrong.)
I am not aware of any laws per se that dictate when doctors can write notes. ADA regulations that protect employment are kind of irrelevant in regards to our interactions with patients, correct?This is the nuance I am trying to get at. The line of substance use disorder, intoxication, withdrawals, etc and where can we write a note?
The law recognizes that there aren't job protections for people showing up intoxicated at a work place, you get fired. You have a migraine and say I'm leaving home, get a doctors note, you get protections for that. Drink at work, and say I'm going home to finish the bottle, you don't get protections with your employer. See what I'm trying to tease out?
I am not aware of any laws per se that dictate when doctors can write notes. ADA regulations that protect employment are kind of irrelevant in regards to our interactions with patients, correct?
I think this gets back to the fact that doctor's notes are pretty stupid and not medically necessary in general. So I think you can take one of several general approaches: 1) write anyone who asks a generic note, 2) write no one a note ever, 3) only write notes for patients who are contagious or for whom work would exacerbate the current medical condition.
I don't think that whether a condition is self-inflicted is useful in this decision as this can apply to many medical conditions (e.g. lung cancer 2/2 smoking, DKA 2/2 poorly controlled diabetes, MI 2/2 too many hamburgers, psychosis 2/2 non-med compliance, relapse in a pt with OUD) and I can't think of how this principle could be applied in a generalizable manner.