Title: University Health Associates
1University Health Associates
- My employee needs to be off work
- What do I do?
Please you the left and right arrow keys to move
from slide to slide.
2Ask yourself
- Will they need to be off more than 7 days?
- Yes They will need to complete a Family Medical
Leave Request Form or Physician Statement and
submit it to you and Human Resources - No They will just need a physician statement to
attach to their timesheet
3What Next?
- They submitted my form, now what?
- Once they have submitted their Leave Request
Form, Human Resources will determine what type of
leave they are eligible for. - Family Medical Leave of Absence
- Medical Leave of Absence
4What is Family Medical Leave of Absence
- The FMLA allows employees to balance their work
and family life by taking reasonable unpaid leave
for certain family and medical reasons. - Employees are entitled to take up to 12-weeks of
unpaid leave if they meet the eligibility
criteria for FMLA - The employees job is protected during this leave
in most cases
5FMLA Eligibility
- To be eligible for FMLA, an employee must meet
all of the following requirements - Must be a full-time or part-time regular employee
- Temporary employees and students are not eligible
- Employed by UHA for at least 12 months
- Worked at least 1,250 hours in the previous 12
months - Meet the family or medical criteria for the FMLA
Act.
6Reasons to take FMLA
- An employee is granted leave for any of the
following reasons - Birth and care of a newborn child of the employee
- Placement of a child for adoption or foster care
for the newly placed child - Care for immediate family member(spouse, child or
parent) with a serious health condition - Medical leave for the employee when they are
unable to work due to their own serious health
condition
7UHA Specifics of FMLA
- 12-weeks entitlement is over a rolling calendar
year - UHA will determine eligible time by verifying any
previous time used in the previous 12 months from
the first day of the leave being requested - Example - May 1, 2005 you request a leave through
May 31, 2005. UHA will look back to May 1, 2004
to see if you had taken a FMLA during that time
and if so, how many weeks were used. If you took
a 2 week leave August 1, 2004 - August 14, 2004,
then you will only be eligible for 10 weeks for
the May 1, 2005 leave since you had taken 2 weeks
within the past 12 months. - Additionally, once you get to August 1, 2005, you
will also regain the days you used prior in 2004
since the calendar continually moves as you
progress through your leave.
8UHA Specifics of FMLA
- Who are immediate family members
- Employees spouse (includes common-law)
- Employees parents (not in-laws or grandparents)
- Employees children(biological, step, adopted or
foster) - In some cases, if the child is an adult, over the
age of 18, you may not be eligible to take FMLA.
The adult child must be incapable of self-care
due to a mental or a physical disability.
9UHA Specifics of FMLA
- Serious Health Condition as certified by a
health care provider - Inpatient care
- Incapacity for three consecutive days with
continuing treatment by health care provider - Pregnancy or prenatal care
- Treatment for incapacity due to chronic health
condition
10UHA Specifics of FMLA
- Unpaid leave versus paid leave
- The FMLA Act allows employers to substitute paid
leave for the period of time taken under FMLA - UHA requires an employee to use their Short-Term
Disability and, in some cases, their Paid Time
Off when on FMLA
11Serious Health Conditions
- Some examples of health conditions considered
serious under FMLA - cancer, Alzheimer's, severe stroke, illness
requiring hospice care, asthma, or other severe
chronic conditions - Some examples of health conditions not considered
serious under FMLA - common cold, flu, dental, orthodontics, acne
treatments, and normal physician visits
12Who is a Health Care Provider?
- A Health Care Provider is
- Physician
- Podiatrist
- Dentist
- Clinical Psychologist
- Optometrist
- Chiropractor licensed in our state
- Mid-Level Provider Nurse Practitioner, Physician
Assistant, Clinical Social Worker - Christian Science Practitioner
13Who is not a Health Care Provider?
- A Health Care Provider is not
- Registered Nurse
- Physical Therapist
- Counselor
- Front Office Staff
- Technician or Technologist
14Paid Leave Substitution
- The Paid-Leave Substitution follows the same
premise as our Short-Term Disability policy - Inpatient, invasive or evasive procedures or
emergent care for serious health conditions give
an employee immediate access to STD and continued
access to STD for the period of incapacity - Three or more days of incapacity without one of
the above reasons requires the employee to take
the first 2 days of incapacity as PTO, then they
can access STD on the third day. To continue
accessing STD for the remainder of the illness,
the employee would need a physician statement - The employee can choose to access PTO once they
have exhausted their STD for FMLA except for
pregnancies extending beyond the normal recovery
times. In some cases of a Medical Leave, the
employee may be required to access PTO once they
have exhausted their STD, as well.
15Full FMLA or Intermittent FMLA
- Full FMLA
- Off work for 7 or more consecutive days
- Time is taken in 8 hour days
- Intermittent FMLA
- Off work intermittently over a specific time
period - Time is taken as needed in hourly increments,
periodically during the specified time period
16UHA Intermittent FMLA Specifics
- For Intermittent FMLA, UHA will allow the
employee to access STD or PTO depending on the
reason for the leave - For periodic treatments for chronic illness, the
employee can access STD - For periodic follow-up physician visits, the
employee can access PTO - Remember we still follow the STD policy when
determining the type of paid leave to
substitute.
17Certification of Leave
- Certification (physician statement) or the Family
Medical Leave Request form must be submitted to
Human Resources as soon as possible or prior to a
leave known in advance - If certification is not received within 30 days
of the first day of the leave, the leave can be
denied for FMLA. - For intermittent leave, employees should provide
a physician statement to their supervisor for
each occurrence to ensure the appropriate Paid
Leave is used.
18Recertification
- UHA requires employees on an intermittent leave
to recertify the need for the leave annually - UHA requires employees to recertify any time
there is a change in the original leave request
19Returning from Leave
- UHA requires all employees returning from FMLA to
present a Return-to-work slip prior to working - Return-to-work slips are to be presented to
supervisors and HR - If the leave was for a family member, a
return-to-work slip is preferred however, a
verbal notification can be given to the
supervisor and HR
20My employee is not eligible for FMLANow What?
- If your employee does not meet the eligibility
for FMLA, they may still qualify for a Medical
Leave of Absence - Medical Leave of Absence entitles the employee to
up to 6 months or 26 weeks of leave for serious
health conditions. - UHA uses the same criteria for determining
medical need for a Medical Leave of Absence as we
use for FMLA
21Medical Leave Specifics
- Medical Leaves run concurrent with all other
leaves. An employee can only be authorized to be
off the job a total of 6 months/26 weeks in a
rolling calendar year - Example - they have exhausted your FMLA
entitlement (12 weeks) and need to be out again
for 6 weeks. This would be a Medical Leave, but
they would only have 8 weeks remaining of Medical
Leave at the end of the current 6 week request. - Still follows a rolling calendar year
22Medical Leave Specifics
- Immediate Family
- Same as the FMLA
- Serious Health Conditions
- Same as the FMLA
- Paid Leave Substitution
- Same as the FMLA
- Certification/Recertification
- Same as the FMLA
- Health Care Providers
- Same as the FMLA
23As a supervisor, what do I do?
- My employee has notified me he/she may be off for
more than 7 days. What do I need to do? - Make sure you get the appropriate form from your
employee prior to the leave ensure all the
information requested on the form is complete - If he/she do not have the appropriate form in
advance, instruct your employee on the
appropriate form he/she needs to request a leave - If you do not get the appropriate form from the
employee within a week of the first day of leave,
you should follow-up with the employee to ensure
you get the appropriate form. Delays in getting
the form can impact whether the leave is approved
or denied and the employees paid leave balances
can be inappropriately charged - Forward copies of the form to HR upon receipt for
processing of the employees leave
24As a supervisor, what do I do?
- While my employee is out on a leave, what do I
need to do? - When on leave, keep in contact with your employee
to make sure nothing has changed - If something has changed with his/her leave,
request an updated physician statement indicating
the change - Communicate any changes in the leave to HR
forward the appropriate forms upon receipt - Complete a timesheet for the employee, and make
sure to keep a copy for their files upon their
return
25As a supervisor, what do I do?
- My employee is preparing to return to work, what
do I need to do? - Contact the employee to verify the return-to-work
date and if there will be any limitations or
restrictions associated with the return - If there are limitations or restrictions, contact
HR to discuss there are no light duty positions
in which to place the employee. The return may
need to be delayed, or the hours of work may need
to be adjusted, to accommodate the employees
limitations pr restrictions upon returning to
work - Require a return-to-work slip prior to the return
date or on the date of the return before the
employee begins the work day - Make sure HR gets a copy of the return-to-work
slip upon receipt
26Resources
- Family Medical Leave Request Form
- UHAonline under Human Resources - Forms
- Family Medical Leave FAQ
- UHAonline under Human Resources - Frequently
asked questions - Human Resources is available to answer your
specific questions - 293-4270