Uppsala9496
Diamond Member
If you don't provide a doc's note, they can say you are not allowed to return to work until you do. That is perfectly legal.
And it is NOT a hipaa violation to state in an employee manual a doc note is needed after 3 consecutive days out of the office for non-pto days.
No medical information is being provided. It is simply the doc saying you were out due to an illness. No specifics are provided.
For the last 7 years I have been underwriting employment practices liability. I've reviewed more termination claims that I can count. Asking for a docs note is perfectly legal. It is a common and encouraged practice to have this stated in employee handbooks. You signed off saying you reviewed the handbook when you started (assuming you did), so you have no recourse to say you were unaware of the policy.
Good luck. If you are a good employee they may make you use 3 PTO days in lieu of sick days. Or they could just not pay you the 3 days. Or they could write you up. Or they could terminate you for cause...
And it is NOT a hipaa violation to state in an employee manual a doc note is needed after 3 consecutive days out of the office for non-pto days.
No medical information is being provided. It is simply the doc saying you were out due to an illness. No specifics are provided.
For the last 7 years I have been underwriting employment practices liability. I've reviewed more termination claims that I can count. Asking for a docs note is perfectly legal. It is a common and encouraged practice to have this stated in employee handbooks. You signed off saying you reviewed the handbook when you started (assuming you did), so you have no recourse to say you were unaware of the policy.
Good luck. If you are a good employee they may make you use 3 PTO days in lieu of sick days. Or they could just not pay you the 3 days. Or they could write you up. Or they could terminate you for cause...