Workplace Conflict Resolution: 10 ways to manage employee conflict and improve office communication, the workplace environment and team productivity.

Distracted or Disabled: When Does ADHD Count as a Protected 'Disability'?

Do you have employees who are easily distracted, restless, disorganized and forgetful? Maybe that’s just who they are—or maybe they’ve been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). It’s pretty common. About 8 million American adults suffer from it. It’s an “invisible” disability, but one court recently said employers shouldn’t be so fast to discount it. A disability is a disability … whether you can see it or not.

Case In Point: Dr. Robert Lewis was hired by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to work in the emergency room. After about four years, he told the emergency-room chief doctor that he thought he had ADHD. He asked to be accommodated by seeing only one patient at a time. Plus, he wanted to be able to fill out patients' medical charts in one batch after seeing all the patients for the day. 

The chief denied his request and formally put Lewis on probation because he was “impaired and distractible.” Lewis was also required to undergo a psychological evaluation. Subsequently, Lewis was diagnosed with ADHD.

The hospital asked his treating doctor to provide “as much information as possible.” Lewis's doctor said confidentiality requirements prohibited him from providing “as much information as possible” but he offered to respond to specific questions. The hospital never followed up.

Shortly thereafter, the hospital suspended Lewis for allegedly failing to provide a letter from his psychologist about his ADHD diagnosis, failing to park in the doctors' parking lot and having unsigned paperwork for more than 30 days. Eventually, Lewis was terminated.

Lewis sued under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), saying the hospital had a duty to accommodate his ADHD behavior. The hospital argued that it could legally fire Lewis for failing to provide complete medical documentation about this ADHD status. (Lewis v. UPMC Bedford, W.D. Pa., 3/30/09).

What happened next … and what lessons can be learned?

The court sided with Lewis and sent the case to a jury to decide, saying Lewis showed enough evidence that the hospital regarded him as disabled and fired him because of his ADHD.

The judge rejected the hospital’s defense that it fired Lewis because he didn’t provide enough medical info. The court said, “Disabled employees, especially those with psychiatric disabilities, may have good reasons for not wanting to reveal … every detail of their medical records because much of the information may be irrelevant to identifying and justifying accommodations, could be embarrassing, and might actually exacerbate workplace prejudice.”

3 Lessons Learned …Without Going to Court

1. Dump the microscope. Never put an employee under the performance microscope after he or she exercises a legal right. The court in this case noted that Lewis was being singled out for a psychiatric evaluation that others did not have to undergo and that was unfair.

2. Don’t play doctor. 
The chief doctor of the emergency room was trying to second guess the doctor’s diagnosis of ADHD, so he followed Lewis around on patient rounds looking for symptoms. Even if you are a doctor, don’t play doctor. Just get a doctor’s note.

3. Say, “Ah!”
Or, better yet, say “thank you” when an employee gives you a doctor’s note about their disability. Then engage in the interactive process with the employee and consider reasonable accommodations. Otherwise, you just might need a painkiller when the jury comes back with a verdict against you.


Workplace Conflict Resolution: 10 ways to manage employee conflict and improve office communication, the workplace environment and team productivity.


6 Responses to "Distracted or Disabled: When Does ADHD Count as a Protected 'Disability'?"

 
Jennifer
said this on 07 May 2009 12:02:09 PM EST
How should an employer respond when the need for specific accomodation changes? For example, if an employee needs a certain accomdation to return to the workplace and several months later the "accomodation" changes, what should the employer do?

 
John
said this on 07 May 2009 12:09:38 PM EST
Are there any guidelines as to what reasonable accommodations are for an employee with ADHD? Also if the job required the ability to focus on a number of tasks at once would a diagnosis of ADHD mean that the employee was protected from being fired because they could not effectively fulfill the job requirements? Thanks!

 
Dawn
said this on 07 May 2009 1:07:25 PM EST
John, The Job Accommodation Network provides a wealth of information on reasonable accommodations and does have guidelines relative to Attention Deficit Disorder (http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/adhd.html). This is a great resource that I've used for years. Good luck!

 
jglennon
said this on 07 May 2009 6:42:25 PM EST
We make certain we research references thoroughly when we hire someone. If they have AD/HD or an undiagnosed attention problem, and we decide to hire them, we make certain the job given is appropriate, ie, something like programming -- where they can work on a variety of things at one time and still be highly productive, etc.

A number of good attention training/cognitive programs exist for adults with attention problems. We've used Play Attention (www.playattention.com) with our staff with great success.

Bottom line: check references, do a good interview, and if they are qualified, find the right place for them. Do expect someone to do something they are not wired to do.

 
jglennon
said this on 07 May 2009 6:43:49 PM EST
Sorry, DON'T expect someone to do something they are not wired to do.

 
MarieB
said this on 09 Jul 2009 3:42:11 PM EST
Reasonable accommodations: Under Title I of the ADA, employers must provide reasonable accommodations to qualified individuals with disabilities. Accommodations are changes to the work environment or the way things are usually done that allow an individual with a disability to enjoy equal employment opportunities. There are many reasonable accommodations that may be useful to people with psychiatric disabilities. Examples are restructuring job tasks, providing self-paced workloads and flexible hours, furnishing written job instructions, and allowing time off for professional counseling. An accommodation is not considered reasonable if it creates an undue hardship for the employer.

http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/publications/allpubs/sma00-3471/page8.asp




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