experience –
Giving notice related to health issueRating: (votes: 0) ![]() GO DIRECTLY TO HR AND OBTAIN THE FORMS FOR FMLA.Call your facility's EAP line, and get the first appt available.Do not give notice - you are sick. Have your doc write a brief letter about your recent issues. Keep your head up, and Best Wishes. One of my favorite instructors had lupus. Take care of yourself. Comment:
Quote from mamamerleeGO DIRECTLY TO HR AND OBTAIN THE FORMS FOR FMLA.Call your facility's EAP line, and get the first appt available.Do not give notice - you are sick. Have your doc write a brief letter about your recent issues. Keep your head up, and Best Wishes. One of my favorite instructors had lupus. Take care of yourself.
Comment:
Hold it. You said you've been working at this site "a little less than a year." How much less? FMLA is a good option to give your body time to recover, as the earlier posters suggested, but you cannot claim it until you have worked for your given employer for at least one year.If there is any way you can drag yourself through till you hit the one year mark, do it. If you have a supervisor or manager you REALLY trust, you could try talking to him/her about the situation. But going off health insurance now is the worst idea in the history of man, unless you're able to get it through COBRA or a spouse. I wish you the very best, because I know from experience how hard such situations can be. You might try the Nurses with Disabilities forum for additional advice.
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My time at this facility has only been seven months. I spoke to the day house supervisor and rightly so, I don't have any recourse at this time other than to give notice which I did. I'm not in a position to take FMLA, or hold on to any medical insurance which may sound like health insurance suicide but.. it is akin to torture for a person to try to hobble into a 40 hr/wk 11p-7a shift to "hold on to something" when in doing so may put you in the hospital. I will see what the nurses with disabilities forum has going for support aside from medical doctor treatment if any and other support groups. Right now standing at a pyxis for 2.5 hours pulling meds for two floors (I work at a psych hospital adult open unit and chemical depencency) and 4 to six admits nightly, all 38 chart check audits and lab preps with just me and another RN would completely sabotage any hope of preserving my health for any part time work elsewhere. There were no offers of alternatives or accepting a doctors statement regarding my current health condition or for less hours. I will just have to accept paying for the tremendous lab bills and rheumatologist's fees and specialty testing myself somehow as opposed to making med errors at work and passing out on the drive home in the car the next morning (which I practcally did two days ago and almost caused a highway accident) I gave proper notice and reason. I can't see them not giving a satisfactory referal if my performance was fine aside from this recent health problem causing me to suddenly have to be absent?
Comment:
You would not be the first person who got poor referrals after leaving a job over health reasons. It does not take much to convey a negative attitude toward a former employee. Hope you are able to resolve this so that you can work.
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Have you asked them directly what your records will say and/or what type of reference they would give in the future? Be sure the proper information/explanation for your recent attendance problem is documented appropriately in your employee file ... and then ask them how that will be conveyed to any future potential employer who may call for a reference check.Don't assume they would give you a bad reference ... but also don't assume they will give you a good one. Ask them directly, express your concerns, and ask that it be listed in your file as a resignation due to illness -- not that you were unreliable and irresponsible.
Comment:
Quote from newtressMy time at this facility has only been seven months. I spoke to the day house supervisor and rightly so, I don't have any recourse at this time other than to give notice which I did. I'm not in a position to take FMLA, or hold on to any medical insurance which may sound like health insurance suicide but.. it is akin to torture for a person to try to hobble into a 40 hr/wk 11p-7a shift to "hold on to something" when in doing so may put you in the hospital. I will see what the nurses with disabilities forum has going for support aside from medical doctor treatment if any and other support groups. Right now standing at a pyxis for 2.5 hours pulling meds for two floors (I work at a psych hospital adult open unit and chemical depencency) and 4 to six admits nightly, all 38 chart check audits and lab preps with just me and another RN would completely sabotage any hope of preserving my health for any part time work elsewhere. There were no offers of alternatives or accepting a doctors statement regarding my current health condition or for less hours. I will just have to accept paying for the tremendous lab bills and rheumatologist's fees and specialty testing myself somehow as opposed to making med errors at work and passing out on the drive home in the car the next morning (which I practcally did two days ago and almost caused a highway accident) I gave proper notice and reason. I can't see them not giving a satisfactory referal if my performance was fine aside from this recent health problem causing me to suddenly have to be absent?
Comment:
To the OP;What does your Doctor say when you've consulted about your medical condition and work related issues? Can you be placed on light duty? Can you get temporary disability? There are many options. You are close enough to the situation to know what fits best, but you must try and get enough information to make an informed decision. Exhaust your resources, not yourself.Make a face to face appointment with your Doctor. Be your own patient advocate and ask for options available to you....what has the Doctor done in the past for situations such as yours.
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I hope you feel better soon and please don't resign yourself to not working full time just because of a Lupus diagnosis at least until you see how your disease progresses. Take care.
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Thank you all for the input and support. To answer the above, my doctor has told me straight out to get off the 11-7 shift. When confirmed today that I could not transfer to another shift or even go to prn status I didn't really have any other recourse or plan of action to salvage anything. I had not oppted for disability benefits at hiring, and did not think I would ever need it. Never say never. The supervisor was quite cut and dry.. bye bye. Interesting thing about this Lupus business is that the go-getter in you gets gone. The wrangling it takes to try to get some things in place for yourself when you can't even bare weight on your ankles and even your hair hurts, is so daunting when the body is in complete revolt and betrayal. I want that multi tasking sharp person back. What I need to be doing is let go for now. You all know the nerve racking anquish of bargaining in your mind about leaving a job or staying. You don't sleep too well. I could hardly accept putting myself out of work and going into that office and tell them I am resigning. But to think of getting restorative sleep, reduced chaos and less adrenaline surging (which triggers autoimmune disorders two fold) and feeling somewhat human again is a welcome releif. Remember the worst flu you ever had and imagine working night after night trying to care for your patients and be safe at the same time. Any time you are even a bit off you run the risk of error. Believe me I am giving myself a gift and a blessing by leaving with nothing, and hopefully gaining my health back one cell at a time.
Comment:
You have my heartfelt best wishes for your future. I hope this break helps you to regain the health-ground you've lost while trying to be a great employee. When you're feeling a bit better, I still recommend talking to the folks at BVR/RSC. Their help can be a godsend. Good luck!
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Have you considered contacting the LUPUS foundation in your state?? How about attending LUPUS support group meetings? You may find that people who live with LUPUS are the best resources for support, suggestions, etc..There is great promise for a medication for LUPUS; it is awaiting FDA approval. Google Lupus Foundation for all kinds of info.I hope you can find your way through all that you are experiencing.
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