
Interested in combating potential Family & Medical Leave
Act fraud? What employer isn’t? The best way to keep employees from gaming
FMLA leave is to use the law’s medical certification process.
FMLA gives you the right to obtain information from the employee’s physician
about the ailment and (at least for the first certification) to obtain a second
or third opinion from an independent physician.
To make sure employees take only FMLA leave to which they are entitled, follow
these 10 steps:
1. Obtain a medical certification for each request for leave
due to a serious health condition. It’s important that your sick leave or
attendance policy requires a doctor’s certification for all absences of three
or more days for the leave to be excused. If there’s no such requirement and
you intend to require paid leave to run concurrent with FMLA leave, you might
not be able to require a medical certification, which is the first step in an
anti-fraud program.
2. Enforce a policy denying the leave request if an employee
fails to submit certification within 15 days. In each instance, assess any
appropriate penalties for failure to be at work.
3. Examine the certification closely to ensure it’s been
properly and fully completed. If the medical certification is incomplete,
specify in writing what information is lacking and allow the employee at least
seven days to cure the deficiency. If the employee fails to do so, deny the leave
request. If the medical certification doesn’t support the existence of a
serious health condition, obviously you should deny the request.
LEAP
2010 – the 6th annual Labor & Employment Law Advanced
Practices Symposium – features comprehensive coverage of FMLA,
4. Require a second opinion if the circumstances are even
slightly suspicious.
5. Once the certification is approved, make a limited inquiry
each time the employee requests more leave, particularly in the case of intermittent
FMLA leave. Is this leave related to the original qualifying reason?
6. Watch the schedule of absences closely in cases of
intermittent leave to determine whether a suspicious pattern develops (e.g.,
immediately before and after weekends or days off) or whether there’s a change
in the frequency or timing. Such actions could suggest a change in condition
that enables you to request a recertification.
7. Request recertifications as often as the law allows. The
frequency of recertification permitted will differ depending on the type of
leave and the type of serious health condition.
Can you risk a million-dollar
employee lawsuit? Even if you win, you
lose – in lost time, legal fees, morale, productivity and more. The best lawsuit is the one that never gets
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8. Require accrued leave to run
concurrently with FMLA leave when allowed by law. When an employee realizes
that taking leave today will affect future vacation time, he or she is more
likely to take FMLA only when the need is legitimate.
9. Ask the physician to verify that the medical certification
is exactly as he or she signed it and has not been altered.
10. Aggressively pursue potential fraud, and if concrete
evidence of fraud is discovered, take appropriate disciplinary action. Always
follow up on tips from fellow employees or other sources that the employee does
not, in fact, need leave.
Register TODAY for Early-Bird Savings
LEAP 2010 – the 6th annual Labor & Employment Law Advanced Practices Symposium – features a session on the legal cases arising from the 2008 FMLA regulations. FMLA is also the topic of one of our Interactive Breakfast Roundtables. We’ll show you how these rulings may impact you.
LEAP 2010 takes
place April 21-23 at
Sign up for LEAP today! As a LEAP Letter reader, you’ll save $100.00 off
the tuition others must pay. And when you take advantage of our Early Bird
Discount, we’ll knock another $100.00 off! Attendees also get their choice
of three FREE pre-conference sessions … comprehensive course materials
… and six FREE months of our HR SPECIALIST: EMPLOYMENT LAW
newsletter PLUS our PREMIUM PLUS online service.
Between fraud concerns, intermittent leave, defining a “serious health condition,” and more, FMLA can make HR pros want to take leave – of their senses. LEAP 2010 will show you how to deal with your current challenges … and prepare for the next ones.
I look forward to seeing you in beautiful
Sincerely,
(sig.)
Phillip A. Ash, Publisher
The HR Specialist
P.S. We’ve arranged a very special room rate at the Hotel del Coronado, but we’ve reserved fewer rooms than expected attendees. Go to www.HotelDel.com or call toll-free 800-468-3533 today, and use Group Code “LEAP 2010” for your discounted rate.
P.P.S. Your satisfaction is unconditionally guaranteed. If LEAP 2010 fails to meet your needs, we will refund 100% of your tuition – no hassles, no questions asked. Your course materials and your two FREE bonuses (a combined $523.50 value) are yours to keep. It’s that simple.