[Jobs] Disabilities in U.S. Workplaces Rise
caribou yukon
caribou_yukon at msn.com
Sun Jun 10 14:31:39 CDT 2007
Could you please provide the bibliograpic information for the article you
sent? Without it one cannot reference it in a report or written article.
Thank you.
ekm
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mary Ann Rojek" <brightsmile1953 at comcast.net>
To: "Jobs for the Blind" <jobs at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, June 10, 2007 12:01 PM
Subject: [Jobs] Disabilities in U.S. Workplaces Rise
Disabilities in U.S.
Workplaces Rise
Experts suggest the number of American workers with disabilities is
continuing to
increase. Will the disabled workers pressure employers to implement
additional accommodations
for employees?
By Barbara Worthington
It's estimated that Americans with physical or mental impairments may number
as many
as 50 million, according to a report issued by a panel at the
Institute of Medicine
, a Washington-based nonprofit medical-advisory organization.
The group says that is a dramatic increase from the past, and the situation
will
only worsen because of Americans' unhealthy lifestyles.
Common behaviors, such as poor eating habits, sedentary tendencies and
obesity --
which frequently leads to back problems, joint injuries and diseases such as
diabetes
-- coupled with longer life expectancies and a variety of mental conditions,
may
create problems for employers.
Faced with larger numbers of disabled workers, companies will need to find
ways to
accommodate their employees in order to maintain an efficient and productive
workforce,
experts say. Sometimes an accommodation may be as simple as offering
telecommuting
options or flexible work hours.
"A bad back certainly can be a disability," says Lewis Maltby, president of
the National
Workrights Institute in
Princeton, N.J.
"For individuals whose jobs involve heavy lifting, the company will have to
accommodate
them by giving them less strenuous physical work -- if it's available."
Not many conditions, however, meet the statutory definition of a disability
under
the Americans with Disabilities Act, despite the adverse effects on workers'
abilities,
he says.
"In many cases, employers won't have to make any accommodations because
these conditions
don't rise to the level of a disability under the law," he says.
But, such accommodations are not always expensive or disruptive, according
to Douglas
Kruse, a professor of Human Resource Management at
Rutgers University in Piscataway,
N.J., who uses a wheelchair himself.
Many such accommodations, he says, are "simply along the lines of flexible
work schedules,"
such as alternative schedules, part-time hours or working from home. Some
disabled
workers prefer to hold temporary jobs.
Of accommodations that need to be made, "most are either costless or don't
have a
real direct monetary cost." He says the university installed an automatic
door for
him, along with a "couple of other minor accommodations."
"Obviously, some people with disabilities do require some type of
accommodations,"
he says, including "adaptations to the physical environment, such as
changing desks
around and special computer equipment, ramps and so forth."
Kruse noted that a recent national survey revealed that of all employers
that employ
people with disabilities, only 24 percent reported having to make any
accommodations
at all. "Most people with disabilities don't require accommodations -- or
just very
minor ones."
Accommodations, however, may create the potential for problems because of
perceived
inequities by co-workers, Maltby says. If an employee has a medical problem,
his
colleagues will "generally be sympathetic to that employee getting an
accommodation."
The difficulty occurs when an employee is being accommodated with a flexible
schedule
or telecommuting because of a mental problem.
"It's hard to explain to an employee why she can't telecommute when someone
else
is telecommuting because of a disability [that's sometimes self-inflicted],"
Maltby
says. "It doesn't change the law; it's still a disability."
Kruse agrees that employees may have concerns about accommodations. He notes
that
case studies suggest that companies with cultures that are "responsive to
the needs
of all individuals" are much better environments for people with
disabilities.
"If a company tries to be responsive to the needs of all employees, then
accommodations
for people with disabilities don't really stand out as unusual," Kruse says.
"If
a company is more bureaucratic, more rules- and procedures-oriented, then
accommodations
really do stand out."
Increasing numbers of disabled workers doesn't necessarily translate into
reduced
productivity, according to Kruse. "There's a lot of evidence that disabled
people,
assuming they have accommodations, are just as productive as people without
disabilities.
Reduced productivity is not a concern."
May 14, 2007
Copyright 2007© LRP Publications
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