Take this step to get more from an FMLA certification
Many challenges under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) involve certifications supporting the need for leave for an employee’s own condition. Taking one extra step can help make this process easier.
If you’re reading this, you probably already know that an FMLA certification can be the holy grail of a smooth FMLA process (if it’s complete and sufficient), or it can be a big log jam (if it’s not complete and sufficient).
Oh, happy day when you receive a certification by the deadline, and it has all the entries completed properly to determine if the employee has a serious health condition, as well as the duration of the leave.
One additional step
While you are likely aware that you may request a certification from an employee, you may also take one additional step to obtain a bit more useful information. When requesting a certification, you may provide a statement of the essential functions of the employee’s position for the health care provider to review. A sufficient medical certification must specify what functions of the employee’s position the employee is unable to perform so that you can then determine whether the employee is unable to perform one or more essential job functions. Obtaining information specific to the job’s functions can help make this determination easier.
In this vein, some employers make it a practice to include a job description with the certification and other FMLA “paperwork” (don’t forget to give the employee an eligibility/rights & responsibilities notice, and a designation notice). If you use a job description, make sure it is accurate and up to date.
In short, making the doctor aware of the job’s essential functions can help the doctor (and you) determine whether the employee is actually unable to perform one or more of the functions. You can then use that information, to help determine if the employee has a serious health condition.
Fitness-for-duty certification
In addition to asking for a certification supporting the need for leave, you may require that an employee provide a fitness-for-duty certification before returning to work. This is only the case if the leave was taken for the employee’s own condition, and not a family member
If you want the fitness-for-duty certification to address the employee’s ability to perform the job’s essential functions upon return to work, however, you must provide the employee with a list of the job’s essential functions no later than with the designation notice, and indicate — in the designation notice — that the certification must address the employee’s ability to perform those functions.
Another good reason to take that additional step!
Key to remember: Don’t be afraid to include a list of essential functions or an accurate job description with the functions to help you get useful information both when leave begins to see if an employee has a serious health condition, and when it ends to see if an employee can return to performing the essential functions.