Summary of the new EEOC Enforcement
Guidance on the ADA and Psychiatric Disability

March 28, 1997 - The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
has released a policy guidance concerning application of the Americans with Disabilities
Act to individuals with psychiatric disabilities. The comprehensive document answers some
of the most common questions about psychiatric disabilities and the ADA.
The new guidance should be helpful to consumers, advocates
and employers alike. It discusses how to determine whether a condition is covered under
ADA, disclosure of a disability, requesting reasonable accommodations, examples of
reasonable accommodations, when an employer can discipline a worker for misconduct
resulting from a disability, direct threat and professional licensing.
A guidance is an addition to the EEOC compliance manual
and is used by the agencys investigators in determining whether a complainants
ADA rights have been violated. Although guidance issued by the EEOC are not regulations,
they can inform courts about the official position of the agency responsible for ADA
enforcement in the employment area.
Several of the EEOC positions in the new guidance are
especially important to consumers and advocates:
- The guidance expands the list of major life activities to
include those relevant to psychiatric disability. An employee wishing to establish that he
or she has a covered disability must show substantial limitation of a major life activity.
The guidance includes such activities as , thinking, concentrating, interacting with
others, caring for oneself, speaking, performing manual tasks, or working. Sleeping is
also a major life activity
This expansion should enable people with
psychiatric disabilities to get past the first hurdle under the ADA: whether the employee
has a covered disability.
- The EEOC reiterates its position that the corrective
effects of medication should not be considered when deciding whether an impairment
substantially limits a major life activity. Several courts have disagreed with this
position, but the EEOC has held firm. This is very important to consumers taking
medications that alleviate their symptoms, but does not affect their need for an
accommodation.
- The agency affirms that , episodic conditions may
constitute substantially limiting impairments if they are substantially limiting when
active or have a high likelihood of recurrence in substantially limiting forms. The
guidance mentions bipolar disorder, major depression and schizophrenia as examples of
disabilities that may be episodic over the course of months or years. Accordingly, even if
a disability is not currently active, an employee who needs an accommodation to continue
controlling symptoms can be covered by the ADA.
- The guidance again notes that an employer cannot ask a job
applicant whether he or she has a disability or needs a reasonable accommodation. This is
a particularly useful protection for people with disabilities that are not visible.
- The Commission clarifies that an employer requesting
information from an employee seeking an accommodation may only ask for information that is
necessary to verify the existence of a disability and the need for accommodation. This
provision means an employee or applicant may refuse broad employer requests, such as for
all of a consumers therapy notes. However, employees should be aware that the
guidance allows the employer to insist that the employee see a professional of the
employers choice if the initial information given the employer is insufficient to
prove that the employee has a disability and needs an accommodation.
- The EEOC also takes the position that an employee can use
plain English to request an accommodation and need not use the specific terms
accommodation and . This should make it easier for employees who are not
familiar with the legal terms.
- The guidance gives several examples of potential
accommodations, including modifications to work schedules or policies, physical changes to
the workplace, adjusting supervisory methods, providing a job coach, and reassignment to a
different position. The guidance also makes clear that medication monitoring is not a
reasonable accommodation, so employees cannot be forced to take medication under the
employers directive.
- Importantly, the guidance provides that an employer can
only discipline an employee with a disability for misconduct related to the disability if
the workplace standard is job-related to the employees position and consistent with
business necessity. If the misconduct has no relation to the persons ability to do
the job in question, the employee cannot be disciplined.
The full text of the guidance is available on
the EEOC's web site at www.eeoc.gov or from the Commissions
publication distribution center (1-800-669-3362). Contact The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law for
recent case examples of the ADA and psychiatric disability and other information.
This Summary of the EEOC Guidance
on the ADA and People with Psychiatric Disabilities was prepared by The Bazelon
Center for Mental Health Law. http://www.bazelon.org/