Are doctors’ notes enough to approve FMLA leave?
Employees often take time off from work and give their employers doctors’ notes for the missed time. This often causes employers to wonder if they may accept a doctor's note as a certification supporting the need for leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), or if they must ask that the doctor complete an additional, separate certification as well.
It’s what’s inside that counts
Employers are never mandated to ask employees for an FMLA certification, but they may do so — except when the leave is for bonding with a healthy child.
Whether an employer should accept a doctor’s note instead of a formal FMLA certification will depend upon what the doctor’s note includes.
A doctor’s note might be enough if it includes enough information for the employer to determine that there’s an FMLA-qualifying event, such as:
- Whether the employee or family member has an FMLA serious health condition;
- When the condition began;
- How long it will last;
- What treatment (and when) the employee or family member received;
- Whether the condition is pregnancy, a chronic condition, long-term condition, or one that requires multiple treatments;
- Which essential functions the employee cannot perform or regular life activities a family member cannot perform;
- Whether the employee or family member might need follow-up treatment; or
- Whether the absence is because of a family member’s military duty.
The form or format of this information generally doesn’t matter, only if there’s enough useful information. If employees provide an appropriate note, employers should not ask that they also provide a certification.
If, on the other hand, a note simply asks for time off and nothing else, employers could ask for, and would likely benefit from, a completed certification.
Why a certification matters
Certifications serve as documented evidence on which employers base a determination of whether an employee is entitled to FMLA leave. If employers do not have enough information (from a certification or other source), and an employee later argues that the reason for an absence did not qualify for FMLA leave and should not be counted against the 12 weeks of leave, employers would have a tough time arguing that it does.
As the saying goes, if it’s not documented, it didn’t happen.
Key to remember: Employers may accept doctors’ notes supporting FMLA leave, but the notes should have enough information to make an accurate designation.