Saturday, July 20, 2013

Disability Leave - Moving Toward September

I spoke with a person from our leave management department last week. I told her I am having surgery on September 16th.  She sent me a bunch of forms and a checklist of things to do prior to, during and after short-term disability leave.  She also explained that our company’s disability leave policy covers the following:
  • Paid 100% of salary for the first 13 weeks on disability
  • Paid 80% of salary for weeks 14 – 26 out on disability
  • If I still need to be out after 26 weeks, my case will be reviewed by the insurance company that handles my company’s disability claims. If I were to go out on long term disability, my income would be 40% of salary.
The short-term disability leave is covered under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) that allows for 12 weeks of unpaid leave during any 12 month period.  Because disability leave is covered under FMLA, I will keep my health insurance while out on leave.  The FMLA leave runs concurrently with my company’s short-term disability policy. The short-term disability requirements are in addition to, and not instead of those for FMLA.  Because my leave will be taken continuously, not intermittently, I do not have to use up my vacation and sick days before I get paid by the company’s short-term disability policy. 

The completed forms that are required are:
  • Request for Short-Term Disability Review.  I fill this out.
  • Certification of Health Care Provider for Employee’s Serious Health Condition (FMLA).  My doctor completes this form.
  • Return to Work Certification Form (not until I go back). My doctor also fills out this form.
I completed the first one and sent the second over to Dr. Clancy’s office. My company outsources its disability program to an insurance company. The letter I received from the leave management person stated that if my claim is approved by the insurance company, I will receive a telephone notification and an approval letter via mail.  This letter will outline the process and my responsibilities if my health care provider recommends an extension of my disability leave beyond the initial approval period.  I’m not sure what happens if my claim is not approved by the insurance company – the leave management person said that should not happen.

Wow! This seems highly paperwork-intensive!  The checklist they gave me seems quite thorough and now that I have an assigned medical leave person, I can always call with questions.  At least my company is making a complex process a bit easier by spelling everything out to me.  So far so good!

Meanwhile, we leased an apartment in Boston for part of September/October.  I have a place to recuperate. One more item off my to-do list.


1 comment:

  1. I think you're very lucky to be part of a company that has a good disability policy. I've heard some cases when their disability cost them their job. As if the illness and medical bills weren't enough to deal with, the lack of income and the need to apply for disability claims make the situation even harder. That aside, I wish you the best on your surgery and recovery! Thanks for sharing!

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