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ADA PROTECTS EMPLOYEES
WITH CANCER Now 15
years old, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
protects disabled persons from discrimination in employment
settings. When you first think of individuals with
disabilities, the millions of Americans who have some
history of cancer may not immediately come to mind. But, as
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) discusses
in a recently published guide, a cancer victim may well be
entitled to the protections afforded by the ADA.
Cancer as a Disability
Cancer is a “disability”
within the meaning of the ADA when the cancer itself or its
effects substantially limit one or more of a person’s major
life activities. The limiting condition needs to be more
than just temporary in nature. Just what constitutes a major
life activity is difficult to succinctly describe, but an
exhaustive list would be a long one. Interacting with
others, sleeping, eating, and walking are but a few
examples. As with other types of conditions, cancer will be
treated as a disability if it does not, in fact,
significantly affect a major life activity but an employer
treats the individual as if it does. This reflects the ADA’s
goal of attacking discriminatory stereotypes and assumptions
when they motivate an employer’s decision making.
Information Gathering
During the time period before
any offer of employment has been made, an employer may not
ask an applicant if he or she has (or has had) cancer, or
about cancer-related treatments. The employer is permitted
to ask if an applicant can perform particular job
requirements. If an applicant has volunteered the
information that he or she has (or has had) cancer, the
employer still may not question the applicant about the
cancer or the applicant’s prognosis, but the employer may
ask questions about whether the applicant will need an
accommodation and, if so, what kind.
Once a job offer has been
made, the employer may ask health-related questions and
require a medical exam, as long as the employer treats all
applicants for the same type of position in the same manner.
The discovery that an applicant has (or has had) cancer
cannot be used to withdraw a job offer if the applicant can
perform safely all of a job’s fundamental duties, with or
without reasonable accommodation. When an offer has been
accepted, the employer can ask questions about the
employee’s health or require a medical exam only when it has
a legitimate reason to believe that the cancer may be
affecting the employee’s ability to do the job, and to do it
safely. With a few exceptions, an employer must keep
confidential any medical information learned about an
applicant or employee.
Reasonable Accommodations
Within reason, the ADA
requires employers to make adjustments or accommodations to
enable people with disabilities to enjoy equal employment
opportunities. An employer is not required to subject itself
to undue hardship (that is, significant expense or
difficulty) in order to accommodate someone. Nor must an
employer remove an essential function from a job, although
it may choose to do so. As for cancer-related disabilities,
some individuals may need, and are entitled to, reasonable
accommodations because of the cancer itself, the effects of
cancer medication and treatment, or both. A request is
necessary to trigger the duty to make a reasonable
accommodation, but no “magic words” are required and, in
fact, the request may come from someone acting on behalf of
the disabled person. The guidance is available on the EEOC’s
website at
www.eeoc.gov/facts/cancer.html.
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