Ottawa Citizen

CMA slams plan to require doctor’s note for minor ills

- BY ADAM BURNS

A national doctors’ group TORONTO is raising concerns about the Ontario government’s move to allow employers to require workers to provide a doctor’s note to explain even minor illnesses, such as the common cold. Canadian Medical Associatio­n president Dr. Gigi Osler says the measure — included in the government’s Bill 47 — could cause public health issues, as it will lead to sick people going to the doctor’s office or to work, rather than staying home. The CMA has released the results of an online survey it commission­ed to gauge opinion on the issue. It says the poll, conducted by Ipsos, suggests a majority of working Canadians oppose allowing employers to require sick notes for minor illnesses. The survey also finds that eight in 10 Ontarians who responded said they would likely come in to work when ill if their employer required a sick note. Ipsos says the online survey reached 1,134 employed Canadians over the age of 18, and the results are accurate within 3.3 percentage points, 19 times out of 20. “Requiring sick notes can introduce unnecessar­y public health risks; patients who would have otherwise stayed home may spread viruses or infection while out to get a sick note,” Osler said in a statement issued by the CMA on Friday. She said the legislatio­n also placed an unfair burden on the public and on doctors. “For physicians, writing a sick note is added administra­tive work — time that should be spent providing direct care to patients,” Osler said in the statement. The previous Liberal government amended the provincial Employment Standards Act to prohibit employers from requiring a doctor’s note for “personal emergency leave,” which includes personal illness or injury. The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves’ Making Ontario Open for Business Act would, among other actions, repeal that provision, allowing employers “to require evidence of entitlemen­t to the leave that is reasonable in the circumstan­ces.” The legislatio­n aims to “bring jobs and investment back to our province by lightening the burden on business and making sure that hard work is rewarded,” a Ministry of Labour statement said. Neither the Ministry of Labour nor the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care responded immediatel­y to a request for comment.

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