Great idea — When is COVID-19 a disability?
The effects of COVID-19 can range from mild to life-threatening and can last for months. An individual with COVID-19 or a post-COVID condition called long-COVID might have a disability, and this brings protections under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
It’s important to pay attention to these protections, as ignoring them can set an employer up for trouble with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) or bring an employee lawsuit.
These protections include the right to reasonable accommodation and protection from discrimination. If, for example, an employee who had COVID-19 suffers from shortness of breath, and asks for a workplace accommodation, that request should be considered. Terminating the employee because of the request would be considered discrimination.
The ADA applies to employers with 15 or more employees, although it’s best for all employers to be sensitive to the health needs of their workforce. To help employers navigate requests relating to COVID-19, the EEOC recently published some guidance. Here are some edited excerpts.
Q: When is COVID-19 an actual disability under the ADA?
A: Depending on the specific facts involved in an individual employee’s condition, a person suffering the effects of COVID-19 has an actual disability if the person has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities. Individuals are also protected by the ADA if they have a record of a disability or are regarded as having an impairment that is not both transitory and minor.
Q: Can long-COVID be a disability under the ADA?
A: Yes, in some cases. For example, an individual diagnosed with “long-COVID,” who experiences COVID-19-related intestinal pain, vomiting, and nausea that lingers for many months, even if intermittently, has an actual disability under the ADA.
Q: Is COVID-19 always a disability under the ADA?
A: No. Determining whether a specific employee’s COVID-19 is a disability always requires an individualized assessment.
Q: What are some examples of when an individual who has or has had COVID-19 might be covered by the ADA?
- A: Ongoing but intermittent multiple-day headaches, dizziness, brain fog, and difficulty remembering or concentrating, which the employee’s doctor attributes to the virus.
- A: Shortness of breath, associated fatigue, and other virus-related effects that last, or are expected to last for several months, in an individual who initially receives supplemental oxygen.
- A: Heart palpitations, chest pain, shortness of breath, and related effects due to the virus that last, or are expected to last, for several months.
Q: What are some examples of when an individual with COVID-19 might not be covered by the ADA?
- A: Congestion, sore throat, fever, headaches, and/or gastrointestinal discomfort, which resolve within several weeks with no further symptoms or effects. This person would be subject to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidance for isolation, but would not have a disability under the ADA.
- A: A person who has COVID-19 but is asymptomatic (does not experience any symptoms or effects). This person is still subject to CDC guidance for isolation during the period of infectiousness, but does not have a disability under the ADA.
Q: What if an employee has a COVID-19 disability?
A: If an employee with COVID-19 has a disability and is covered by the ADA, employers must provide a reasonable accommodation, unless it would cause undue hardship. Accommodations might, for example, consist of schedule changes, physical modifications to the workplace, telework, or special or modified equipment.