Sick and Vulnerable, Workers Fear for Health and Their Jobs - New York Times
Sick and Vulnerable, Workers Fear for Health and Their Jobs - New York Times
This story is free online, requires free registration. All the stories in the series Being a Patient are archived, and free to read.
Excerpts below, my comments in italics.
By LISA BELKIN
Published: December 17, 2005
When Marty Domitrovich was first told that he had cancer, he was a 51-year-old sales executive, so successful that he had two goals: to reach $1 million in commissions and bonuses and to become chief executive of his company, where he had worked since his summers in college.
Before long, however, he could no longer travel, and on the bad days he did his work at home, lying on the couch and talking on the telephone.
When Shannon Abert was first told she had scleroderma, she was 35, and an employee is treated after crossing the stark line from worker to patient is broadly defined by legislation. But it is more specifically determined by things like the culture of a workplace and the sensitivity of a boss….
“The diagnosis is a crisis in itself,” said Carolyn Messner, an oncology social worker and director of education and training for cancer care in Manhattan. “The next crisis is telling people.”
(full story…)