Copyright 2005
APSCREEN, Inc.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission


EEOC NOTICE
Number 915.002
Date 10/10/95 

1.  SUBJECT:  Enforcement Guidance: Preemployment Disability-    Related Questions and Medical Examinations. 

2.  PURPOSE: This document provides the EEOC's position under the     Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, on preemployment  disability-related questions and medical examinations. 

3.  EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon receipt. 

4.  EXPIRATION DATE: As an exception to EEOC Order 205.001,  Appendix B, Attachment 4, § a(5), this Notice will remain in  effect until rescinded or superseded. 

5.  ORIGINATOR: ADA Division, Office of Legal Counsel. 

6.  INSTRUCTIONS: File after Section 902 of Volume II of the  Compliance Manual.

 ______________________            ___________________________

Date                               Gilbert F. Casellas Chairman

ADA Enforcement Guidance: Preemployment Disability-Related

Questions and Medical Examinations 

Introduction 

Under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (the "ADA"),1 an

employer may ask disability-related questions and require medical

examinations of an applicant only after the applicant has been

given a conditional job offer.  This Enforcement Guidance explains

these ADA provisions.2

Background

In the past, some employment applications and interviews requested

information about an applicant's physical and/or mental condition. 

This information was often used to exclude applicants with

disabilities before their ability to perform the job was even

evaluated. 

For example, applicants may have been asked about their medical

conditions at the same time that they were engaging in other parts

of the application process, such as completing a written job

application or having references checked.  If an applicant was

then rejected, s/he did not necessarily know whether s/he was

rejected because of disability, or because of insufficient skills

or experience or a bad report from a reference. 

As a result, Congress established a process within the ADA to

isolate an employer's consideration of an applicant's non-medical

qualifications from any consideration of the applicant's medical

condition. 

The Statutory and Regulatory Framework 

Under the law, an employer may not ask disability-related

questions and may not conduct medical examinations until after it

makes a conditional job offer to the applicant.3  This helps

ensure that an applicant's possible hidden disability (including a

prior history of a disability) is not considered before the

employer evaluates an applicant's non-medical qualifications.  An

employer may not ask disability-related questions or require a

medical examination pre-offer even if it intends to look at the

answers or results only at the post-offer stage. 

Although employers may not ask disability-related questions or

require medical examinations at the pre-offer stage, they may do a

wide variety of things to evaluate whether an applicant is

qualified for the job, including the following: 

 * Employers may ask about an applicant's ability to perform

   specific job functions.  For example, an employer may state the

   physical requirements of a job (such as the ability to lift a

   certain amount of weight, or the ability to climb ladders), and

   ask if an applicant can satisfy these requirements. 

 * Employers may ask about an applicant's non-medical

   qualifications and skills, such as the applicant's education, work

   history, and required certifications and licenses.  

 * Employers may ask applicants to describe or demonstrate how they

   would perform job tasks. 

Once a conditional job offer is made, the employer may ask

disability-related questions and require medical examinations as

long as this is done for all entering employees in that job

category.  If the employer rejects the applicant after a

disability-related question or medical examination, investigators

will closely scrutinize whether the rejection was based on the

results of that question or examination. 

If the question or examination screens out an individual because

of a disability, the employer must demonstrate that the reason for

the rejection is "job-related and consistent with business

necessity."4 

In addition, if the individual is screened out for safety reasons,

the employer must demonstrate that the individual poses a "direct

threat."  This means that the individual poses a significant risk

of substantial harm to him/herself or others, and that the risk

cannot be reduced below the direct threat level through reasonable

accommodation.5  

Medical information must be kept confidential.6  The ADA contains

narrow exceptions for disclosing specific, limited information to

supervisors and managers, first aid and safety personnel, and

government officials investigating compliance with the ADA. 

Employers may also disclose medical information to state workers'

compensation offices, state second injury funds, or workers'

compensation insurance carriers in accordance with state workers'

compensation laws7 and may use the medical information for

insurance purposes.8 

        The Pre-Offer Stage

What is a Disability-Related Question? 

Definition: "Disability-Related Question" means a question that is

likely to elicit information about a disability. 

At the pre-offer stage, an employer cannot ask questions that are

likely to elicit information about a disability.  This includes

directly asking whether an applicant has a particular disability. 

It also means that an employer cannot ask questions that are

closely related to disability.9 

On the other hand, if there are many possible answers to a

question and only some of those answers would contain disability-

related information, that question is not "disability-related."10 

Below are some commonly asked questions about this area of the

law. 

* May an employer ask whether an applicant can perform the job? 

   Yes.  An employer may ask whether applicants can perform any or

   all job functions, including whether applicants can perform job

   functions "with or without reasonable accommodation."11 

* May an employer ask applicants to describe or demonstrate how

they would perform the job (including any needed reasonable

accommodations)? 

   Yes. An employer may ask applicants to describe how they would

   perform any or all job functions, as long as all applicants in the

   job category are asked to do this. 

   Employers should remember that, if an applicant says that s/he

   will need a reasonable accommodation to do a job demonstration,

   the employer must either: 

   * provide a reasonable accommodation that does not create an undue

   hardship; or 

   * allow the applicant to simply describe how s/he would perform

   the job function.   

* May an employer ask a particular applicant to describe or

demonstrate how s/he would perform the job, if other applicants

aren't asked to do this? 

   When an employer could reasonably believe that an applicant will

   not be able to perform a job function because of a known

   disability, the employer may ask that particular applicant to

   describe or demonstrate how s/he would perform the function.  An

   applicant's disability would be a "known disability" either

   because it is obvious (for example, the applicant uses a

   wheelchair), or because the applicant has voluntarily disclosed

   that s/he has a hidden disability.  

* May an employer ask applicants whether they will need reasonable

accommodation for the hiring process? 

   Yes.  An employer may tell applicants what the hiring process

   involves (for example, an interview, timed written test, or job

   demonstration), and may ask applicants whether they will need a

   reasonable accommodation for this process. 

* May an employer ask an applicant for documentation of his/her

disability when the applicant requests reasonable accommodation

for the hiring process? 

   Yes.  If the need for accommodation is not obvious, an employer

   may ask an applicant for reasonable documentation about his/her

   disability if the applicant requests reasonable accommodation for

   the hiring process (such as a request for the employer to reformat

   an examination, or a request for an accommodation in connection

   with a job demonstration).  The employer is entitled to know that

   the applicant has a covered disability and that s/he needs an

   accommodation.

   So, the applicant may be required to provide documentation from an

   appropriate professional, such as a doctor or a rehabilitation

   counselor, concerning the applicant's disability and functional

   limitations. 

* May an employer ask applicants whether they will need reasonable

accommodation to perform the functions of the job? 

   In general, an employer may not ask questions on an application or

   in an interview about whether an applicant will need reasonable

   accommodation for a job.  This is because these questions are

   likely to elicit whether the applicant has a disability

   (generally, only people who have disabilities will need reasonable

   accommodations). 

   Example:  An employment application may not ask, "Do you need

   reasonable accommodation to perform this job?" 

   Example:  An employment application may not ask, "Can you do these

   functions with ___ without ___ reasonable accommodation? (Check

   One)" 

   Example:  An applicant with no known disability is being

   interviewed for a job.  He has not asked for any reasonable

   accommodation, either for the application process or for the job. 

   The employer may not ask him, "Will you need reasonable

   accommodation to perform this job?" 

   However, when an employer could reasonably believe that an

   applicant will need reasonable accommodation to perform the

   functions of the job, the employer may ask that applicant certain

   limited questions.  Specifically, the employer may ask whether

   s/he needs reasonable accommodation and what type of reasonable

   accommodation would be needed to perform the functions of the

   job.12  The employer could ask these questions if: 

   * the employer reasonably believes the applicant will need

   reasonable accommodation because of an obvious disability; 

   * the employer reasonably believes the applicant will need

   reasonable accommodation because of a hidden disability that the

   applicant has voluntarily disclosed to the employer; or 

   * an applicant has voluntarily disclosed to the employer that s/he

   needs reasonable accommodation to perform the job. 

   Example:  An individual with diabetes applying for a receptionist

   position voluntarily discloses that she will need periodic breaks

   to take medication.  The employer may ask the applicant questions

   about the reasonable accommodation such as how often she will need

   breaks, and how long the breaks must be.  Of course, the employer

   may not ask any questions about the underlying physical condition.

    Example: An applicant with a severe visual impairment applies for

   a job involving computer work.  The employer may ask whether he

   will need reasonable accommodation to perform the functions of the

   job.  If the applicant answers "no," the employer may not ask

   additional questions about reasonable accommodation (although, of

   course, the employer could ask the applicant to describe or

   demonstrate performance).  If the applicant says that he will need

   accommodation, the employer may ask questions about the type of

   required accommodation such as, "What will you need?"  If the

   applicant says he needs software that increases the size of text

   on the computer screen, the employer may ask questions such as,

   "Who makes that software?" "Do you need a particular brand?" or

   "Is that software compatible with our computers?"  However, the

   employer may not ask questions about the applicant's underlying

   condition.  In addition, the employer may not ask reasonable

   accommodation questions that are unrelated to job functions such

   as, "Will you need reasonable accommodation to get to the

   cafeteria?" 

   An employer may only ask about reasonable accommodation that is

   needed now or in the near future.  An applicant is not required to

   disclose reasonable accommodations that may be needed in the more

   distant future. 

* May an employer ask whether an applicant can meet the employer's

attendance requirements? 

   Yes.  An employer may state its attendance requirements and ask

   whether an applicant can meet them.  An employer also may ask

   about an applicant's prior attendance record (for example, how

   many days the applicant was absent from his/her last job).  These

   questions are not likely to elicit information about a disability

   because there may be many reasons unrelated to disability why

   someone cannot meet attendance requirements or was frequently

   absent from a previous job (for example, an applicant may have had

   day-care problems).

    An employer also may ask questions designed to detect whether an

   applicant abused his/her leave because these questions are not

   likely to elicit information about a disability. 

   Example:  An employer may ask an applicant, "How many Mondays or

   Fridays were you absent last year on leave other than approved

   vacation leave?"

    However, at the pre-offer stage, an employer may not ask how many

   days an applicant was sick, because these questions relate

   directly to the severity of an individual's impairments. 

   Therefore, these questions are likely to elicit information about

   a disability. 

* May an employer ask applicants about their certifications and

licenses? 

   Yes.  An employer may ask an applicant at the pre-offer stage

   whether s/he has certifications or licenses required for any job

   duties.  An employer also may ask an applicant whether s/he

   intends to get a particular job-related certification or license,

   or why s/he does not have the certification or license.  These

   questions are not likely to elicit information about an

   applicant's disability because there may be a number of reasons

   unrelated to disability why someone does not have -- or does not

   intend to get -- a certification/license. 

* May an employer ask applicants about their arrest or conviction

records? 

   Yes.  Questions about an applicant's arrest or conviction records

   are not likely to elicit information about disability because

   there are many reasons unrelated to disability why someone may

   have an arrest/conviction record.13 

* May an employer ask questions about an applicant's impairments?

    Yes, if the particular question is not likely to elicit

   information about whether the applicant has a disability.  It is

   important to remember that not all impairments will be

   disabilities; an impairment is a disability only if it

   substantially limits a major life activity.  So, an employer may

   ask an applicant with a broken leg how she broke her leg.  Since a

   broken leg normally is a temporary condition which does not rise

   to the level of a disability, this question is not likely to

   disclose whether the applicant has a disability.  But, such

   questions as "Do you expect the leg to heal normally?" or "Do you

   break bones easily?" would be disability-related.  Certainly, an

   employer may not ask a broad question about impairments that is

   likely to elicit information about disability, such as, "What

   impairments do you have?" 

* May an employer ask whether applicants can perform major life

activities, such as standing, lifting, walking, etc.? 

   Questions about whether an applicant can perform major life

   activities are almost always disability-related because they are

   likely to elicit information about a disability.  For example, if

   an applicant cannot stand or walk, it is likely to be a result of

   a disability.  So, these questions are prohibited at the pre-offer

   stage unless they are specifically about the ability to perform

   job functions. 

* May an employer ask applicants about their workers' compensation

history? 

   No.  An employer may not ask applicants about job-related injuries

   or workers' compensation history.  These questions relate directly

   to the severity of an applicant's impairments.  Therefore, these

   questions are likely to elicit information about disability. 

* May an employer ask applicants about their current illegal use

of drugs? 

   Yes.  An employer may ask applicants about current illegal use of

   drugs14 because an individual who currently illegally uses drugs

   is not protected under the ADA (when the employer acts on the

   basis of the drug use).15 

* May an employer ask applicants about their lawful drug use?

   No, if the question is likely to elicit information about

   disability.  Employers should know that many questions about

   current or prior lawful drug use are likely to elicit information

   about a disability, and are therefore impermissible at the pre-

   offer stage.  For example, questions like, "What medications are

   you currently taking?" or "Have you ever taken AZT?" certainly

   elicit information about whether an applicant has a disability. 

   However, some innocuous questions about lawful drug use are not

   likely to elicit information about disability. 

   Example:  During her interview, an applicant volunteers to the

   interviewer that she is coughing and wheezing because her

   allergies are acting up as a result of pollen in the air.  The

   interviewer, who also has allergies, tells the applicant that he

   finds "Lemebreathe" (an over-the-counter antihistamine) to be

   effective, and asks the applicant if she has tried it.  There are

   many reasons why someone might have tried "Lemebreathe" which have

   nothing to do with disability.  Therefore, this question is not

   likely to elicit information about a disability. 

* May an employer ask applicants about their lawful drug use if

the employer is administering a test for illegal use of drugs? 

   Yes, if an applicant tests positive for illegal drug use.  In that

   case, the employer may validate the test results by asking about

   lawful drug use or possible explanations for the positive result

   other than the illegal use of drugs. 

   Example:  If an applicant tests positive for use of a controlled

   substance, the employer may lawfully ask questions such as, "What

   medications have you taken that might have resulted in this

   positive test result?  Are you taking this medication under a

   lawful prescription?" 

* May an employer ask applicants about their prior illegal drug

use?

   Yes, provided that the particular question is not likely to elicit

   information about a disability.  It is important to remember that

   past addiction to illegal drugs or controlled substances is a

   covered disability under the ADA (as long as the person is not a

   current illegal drug user), but past casual use is not a covered

   disability.  Therefore, the question is fine as long as it does

   not go to past drug addiction. 

   Example:  An employer may ask, "Have you ever used illegal drugs?"

   "When is the last time you used illegal drugs?" or "Have you used

   illegal drugs in the last six months?"  These questions are not

   likely to tell the employer anything about whether the applicant

   was addicted to drugs. 

   However, questions that ask how much the applicant used drugs in

   the past are likely to elicit information about whether the

   applicant was a past drug addict.  These questions are therefore

   impermissible at the pre-offer stage.  

   Example:  At the pre-offer stage, an employer may not ask an

   applicant questions such as, "How often did you use illegal drugs

   in the past?" "Have you ever been addicted to drugs?" "Have you

   ever been treated for drug addiction?" or "Have you ever been

   treated for drug abuse?" 

* May an employer ask applicants about their drinking habits? 

   Yes, unless the particular question is likely to elicit

   information about alcoholism, which is a disability.  An employer

   may ask an applicant whether s/he drinks alcohol, or whether s/he

   has been arrested for driving under the influence because these

   questions do not reveal whether someone has alcoholism.  However,

   questions asking how much alcohol an applicant drinks or whether

   s/he has participated in an alcohol rehabilitation program are

   likely to elicit information about whether the applicant has

   alcoholism.            

* May an employer ask applicants to "self-identify" as individuals

with disabilities for purposes of the employer's affirmative

action program? 

   Yes.  An employer may invite applicants to voluntarily self-

   identify for purposes of the employer's affirmative action program

   if: 

   * the employer is undertaking affirmative action because of a

   federal, state, or local law (including a veterans' preference

   law) that requires affirmative action for individuals with

   disabilities (that is, the law requires some action to be taken on

   behalf of such individuals); or 

   * the employer is voluntarily using the information to benefit

   individuals with disabilities. 

   Employers should remember that state or local laws sometimes

   permit or encourage affirmative action.  In those cases, an

   employer may invite voluntary self-identification only if the

   employer uses the information to benefit individuals with

   disabilities. 

* Are there any special steps an employer should take if it asks

applicants to "self-identify" for purposes of the employer's

affirmative action program? 

   Yes.  If the employer invites applicants to voluntarily self-

   identify in connection with providing affirmative action, the

   employer must do the following: 

   * state clearly on any written questionnaire, or state clearly

   orally (if no written questionnaire is used), that the information

   requested is used solely in connection with its affirmative action

   obligations or efforts; and 

   * state clearly that the information is being requested on a

   voluntary basis, that it will be kept confidential in accordance

   with the ADA, that refusal to provide it will not subject the

   applicant to any adverse treatment, and that it will be used only

   in accordance with the ADA.  

   In order to ensure that the self-identification information is

   kept confidential, the information must be on a form that is kept

   separate from the application. 

* May an employer ask third parties questions it could not ask the

applicant directly? 

   No.  An employer may not ask a third party (such as a service that

   provides information about workers' compensation claims, a state

   agency, or an applicant's friends, family, or former employers)

   any questions that it could not directly ask the applicant. 

        What is a Medical Examination? 

Definition:  A "Medical Examination" is a procedure or test that

seeks information about an individual's physical or mental

impairments or health. 

At the pre-offer stage, an employer cannot require examinations

that seek information about physical or mental impairments or

health.  It is not always easy to determine whether something is a

medical examination.  The following factors are helpful in

determining whether a procedure or test is medical: 

*     Is it administered by a health care professional or someone

trained by a health care professional? 

*     Are the results interpreted by a health care professional or

someone trained by a health care professional? 

*     Is it designed to reveal an impairment or physical or mental health? 

*     Is the employer trying to determine the applicant's physical

or mental health or impairments? 

*     Is it invasive (for example, does it require the drawing of

blood, urine or breath)? 

*     Does it measure an applicant's performance of a task, or does

it measure the applicant's physiological responses to performing

the task? 

*     Is it normally given in a medical setting (for example, a

health care professional's office)? 

*     Is medical equipment used? 

In many cases, a combination of factors will be relevant in

figuring out whether a procedure or test is a medical examination. 

In some cases, one factor may be enough to determine that a

procedure or test is medical. 

   Example:  An employer requires applicants to lift a thirty pound

   box and carry it twenty feet.  This is not a medical examination;

   it is just a test of whether the applicant can perform this task. 

   But, if the employer takes the applicant's blood pressure or heart

   rate after the lifting and carrying, the test would be a medical

   examination because it is measuring the applicant's physiological

   response to lifting and carrying, as opposed to the applicant's

   ability to lift and carry. 

   Example:  A psychological test is designed to reveal mental

   illness, but a particular employer says it does not give the test

   to disclose mental illness (for example, the employer says it uses

   the test to disclose just tastes and habits).  But, the test also

   is interpreted by a psychologist, and is routinely used in a

   clinical setting to provide evidence that would lead to a

   diagnosis of a mental disorder or impairment (for example, whether

   an applicant has paranoid tendencies, or is depressed).  Under

   these facts, this test is a medical examination. 

Below are some commonly asked questions about the ADA's

restrictions on pre-offer medical examinations. 

* May an employer require applicants to take physical agility

tests? 

   Yes.  A physical agility test, in which an applicant demonstrates

   the ability to perform actual or simulated job tasks, is not a

   medical examination under the ADA.16  

   Example:  A police department tests police officer applicants'

   ability to run through an obstacle course designed to simulate a

   suspect chase in an urban setting.  This is not a medical   examination.

 * May an employer require applicants to take physical fitness

tests? 

   Yes.  A physical fitness test, in which an applicant's performance

   of physical tasks -- such as running or lifting -- is measured, is

   not a medical examination.17 

   However, if an employer measures an applicant's physiological or

   biological responses to performance, the test would be medical.

    Example:  A messenger service tests applicants' ability to run one

   mile in 15 minutes.  At the end of the run, the employer takes the

   applicants' blood pressure and heart rate.  Measuring the

   applicant's physiological responses makes this a medical

   examination. 

* May an employer ask an applicant to provide medical

certification that s/he can safely perform a physical agility or

physical fitness test? 

   Yes.  Although an employer cannot ask disability-related

   questions, it may give the applicant a description of the agility

   or fitness test and ask the applicant to have a private physician

   simply state whether s/he can safely perform the test.

 * May an employer ask an applicant to assume liability for

injuries incurred in performing a physical agility or physical

fitness test? 

   Yes.  An employer may ask an applicant to assume responsibility

   and release the employer of liability for injuries incurred in

   performing a physical agility or fitness test. 

* May an employer give psychological examinations to applicants? 

   Yes, unless the particular examination is medical.  This

   determination would be based on some of the factors listed above,

   such as the purpose of the test and the intent of the employer in

   giving the test.  Psychological examinations are medical if they

   provide evidence that would lead to identifying a mental disorder

   or impairment (for example, those listed in the American

   Psychiatric Association's most recent Diagnostic and Statistical

   Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)). 

   Example:  An employer gives applicants the RUOK Test

   (hypothetical), an examination which reflects whether applicants

   have characteristics that lead to identifying whether the

   individual has excessive anxiety, depression, and certain

   compulsive disorders (DSM-listed conditions).  This test is

   medical. 

   On the other hand, if a test is designed and used to measure only

   things such as honesty, tastes, and habits, it is not medical.

    Example:  An employer gives the IFIB Personality Test

   (hypothetical), an examination designed and used to reflect only

   whether an applicant is likely to lie.  This test, as used by the

   employer, is not a medical examination. 

* May an employer give polygraph examinations to applicants?

    Although most employers are prohibited by federal and state laws

   from giving polygraph examinations, some employers are not

   prohibited from giving these examinations.  Under the ADA,

   polygraph examinations are not medical examinations.18  Many

   times, however, polygraph examinations contain disability-related

   questions, such as questions about what lawful medications the

   applicant is taking.  Employers cannot ask disability-related

   questions as part of a pre-offer examination, even if the

   examination is not itself "medical." 

* May an employer give vision tests to applicants? 

   Yes, unless the particular test is medical.  Evaluating someone's

   ability to read labels or distinguish objects as part of a

   demonstration of the person's ability to do the job is not a

   medical examination.  However, an ophthalmologist's or

   optometrist's analysis of someone's vision is medical.  Similarly,

   requiring an individual to read an eye chart would be a medical

   examination. 

* May an employer give applicants tests to determine illegal use

of controlled substances? 

   Yes.  The ADA specifically states that, for purposes of the ADA,

   tests to determine the current illegal use of controlled

   substances are not considered medical examinations.

 * May an employer give alcohol tests to applicants?

   No.  Tests to determine whether and/or how much alcohol an

   individual has consumed are medical, and there is no statutory

   exemption.

        The Post-Offer Stage 

After giving a job offer to an applicant, an employer may ask

disability-related questions and perform medical examinations. 

The job offer may be conditioned on the results of post-offer

disability-related questions or medical examinations.

 At the "post-offer" stage, an employer may ask about an

individual's workers' compensation history, prior sick leave

usage, illnesses/diseases/impairments, and general physical and

mental health.  Disability-related questions and medical

examinations at the post-offer stage do not have to be related to

the job.19 

If an employer asks post-offer disability-related questions, or

requires post-offer medical examinations, it must make sure that

it follows certain procedures: 

* all entering employees in the same job category must be

subjected to the examination/inquiry, regardless of disability;20

and 

* medical information obtained must be kept confidential.21

 Below are some commonly asked questions about the post-offer

stage. 

* What is considered a real job offer? 

   Since an employer can ask disability-related questions and require

   medical examinations after a job offer, it is important that the

   job offer be real.  A job offer is real if the employer has

   evaluated all relevant non-medical information which it reasonably

   could have obtained and analyzed prior to giving the offer.  Of

   course, there are times when an employer cannot reasonably obtain

   and evaluate all non-medical information at the pre-offer stage. 

   If an employer can show that is the case, the offer would still be

   considered a real offer. 

   Example:  It may be too costly for a law enforcement employer

   wishing to administer a polygraph examination to administer a pre-

   offer examination asking non-disability-related questions, and a

   post-offer examination asking disability-related questions.  In

   this case, the employer may be able to demonstrate that it could

   not reasonably obtain and evaluate the non-medical polygraph

   information at the pre-offer stage. 

   Example:  An applicant might state that his current employer

   should not be asked for a reference check until the potential

   employer makes a conditional job offer.  In this case, the

   potential employer could not reasonably obtain and evaluate the

   non-medical information from the reference at the pre-offer stage.

 * Do offers have to be limited to current vacancies? 

   No.  An employer may give offers to fill current vacancies or

   reasonably anticipated openings. 

* May an employer give offers that exceed the number of vacancies

or reasonably anticipated openings? 

   Yes.  The offers will still be considered real if the employer can

   demonstrate that it needs to give more offers in order to actually

   fill vacancies or reasonably anticipated openings.  For example,

   an employer may demonstrate that a certain percentage of the

   offerees will likely be disqualified or will withdraw from the

   pool. 

   Example:  A police department may be able to demonstrate that it

   needs to make offers to 50 applicants for 25 available positions

   because about half of the offers will likely be revoked based on

   post-offer medical tests and/or security checks, and because some

   applicants may voluntarily withdraw from consideration.

 

   Of course, an employer must comply with the ADA when taking people

   out of the pool to fill actual vacancies.  The employer must

   notify an individual (orally or in writing) if his/her placement

   into an actual vacancy is in any way adversely affected by the

   results of a post-offer medical examination or disability-related

   question. 

   If an individual alleges that disability has affected his/her

   placement into an actual vacancy, the EEOC will carefully

   scrutinize whether disability was a reason for any adverse action. 

   If disability was a reason, the EEOC will determine whether the

   action was job-related and consistent with business necessity.

 * After an employer has obtained basic medical information from

all individuals who have been given conditional offers in a job

category, may it ask specific individuals for more medical

information?

 

 

   Yes, if the follow-up examinations or questions are medically

   related to the previously obtained medical information.22

    Example:  At the post-offer stage, an employer asks new hires

   whether they have had back injuries, and learns that some of the

   individuals have had such injuries.  The employer may give medical

   examinations designed to diagnose back impairments to persons who

   stated that they had prior back injuries, as long as these

   examinations are medically related to those injuries. 

* At the post-offer stage, may an employer ask all individuals

whether they need reasonable accommodation to perform the job?

   Yes. 

* If, at the post-offer stage, someone requests reasonable

accommodation to perform the job, may the employer ask him/her for

documentation of his/her disability? 

   Yes.  If someone requests reasonable accommodation so s/he will be

   able to perform a job and the need for the accommodation is not

   obvious, the employer may require reasonable documentation of the

   individual's entitlement to reasonable accommodation.  So, the

   employer may require documentation showing that the individual has

   a covered disability, and stating his/her functional limitations.

    Example:  An entering employee states that she will need a 15-

   minute break every two hours to eat a snack in order to maintain

   her blood sugar level.  The employer may ask her to provide

   documentation from her doctor showing that: (1) she has an

   impairment that substantially limits a major life activity; and

   (2) she actually needs the requested breaks because of the

   impairment. 

        Confidentiality 

An employer must keep any medical information on applicants or

employees confidential, with the following limited exceptions:

 * supervisors and managers may be told about necessary

restrictions on the work or duties of the employee and about

necessary accommodations; 

* first aid and safety personnel may be told if the disability

might require emergency treatment; 

* government officials investigating compliance with the ADA must

be given relevant information on request;23

 * employers may give information to state workers' compensation

offices, state second injury funds or workers' compensation

insurance carriers in accordance with state workers' compensation

laws;24 and 

* employers may use the information for insurance purposes.25

 Below are some commonly asked questions about the ADA's

confidentiality requirements.

 * May medical information be given to decision-makers involved in

the hiring process? 

   Yes.  Medical information may be given to -- and used by --

   appropriate decision-makers involved in the hiring process so they

   can make employment decisions consistent with the ADA.  In

   addition, the employer may use the information to determine

   reasonable accommodations for the individual.  For example, the

   employer may share the information with a third party, such as a

   health care professional, to determine whether a reasonable

   accommodation is possible for a particular individual.  The

   information certainly must be kept confidential.

    Of course, the employer may only share the medical information

   with individuals involved in the hiring process (or in

   implementing an affirmative action program) who need to know the

   information.  For example, in some cases, a number of people may

   be involved in evaluating an applicant.  Some individuals may

   simply be responsible for evaluating an applicant's references;

   these individuals may have no need to know an applicant's medical

   condition and therefore should not have access to the medical

   information. 

* Can an individual voluntarily disclose his/her own medical

information to persons beyond those to whom an employer can

disclose such information? 

   Yes, as long as it's really voluntary.  The employer cannot

   request, persuade, coerce, or otherwise pressure the individual to

   get him/her to disclose medical information. 

* Does the employer's confidentiality obligation extend to medical

information that an individual voluntarily tells the employer?

 

   Yes.  For example, if an applicant voluntarily discloses bipolar

   disorder and the need for reasonable accommodation, the employer

   may not disclose the condition or the applicant's need for

   accommodation to the applicant's references. 

* Can medical information be kept in an employee's regular

personnel file? 

   No.  Medical information must be collected and maintained on

   separate forms and in separate medical files.26  An employer

   should not place any medical-related material in an employee's

   non-medical personnel file.  If an employer wants to put a

   document in a personnel file, and that document happens to contain

   some medical information, the employer must simply remove the

   medical information from the document before putting it in the

 personnel file.

 * Does the confidentiality obligation end when the person is no

longer an applicant or employee? 

   No, an employer must keep medical information confidential even if

   someone is no longer an applicant (for example, s/he wasn't hired)

   or is no longer an employee.

 * Is an employer required to remove from its personnel files

medical information obtained before the ADA's effective date?

    No.

NOTE: Index removed in ASCII version 

1. Codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-17,

12201-13 (Supp. V 1994). 

2. The analysis in this guidance also applies to federal

sector complaints of non-affirmative action employment

discrimination arising under section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act

of 1973.  29 U.S.C.A. § 791(g) (West Supp. 1994).  In

addition, the analysis applies to complaints of non-affirmative

action employment discrimination arising under section 503 and

employment discrimination under section 504 of the Rehabilitation

Act.  29 U.S.C.A. §§ 793(d), 794(d) (West Supp. 1994). 

3. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(2); 29 C.F.R. §§

1630.13(a), 1630.14(a),(b). 

4. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b); 29 C.F.R. §§

1630.10, 1630.14(b)(3). 

5. 42 U.S.C. § 12113(b); See 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630 app.

§ 1630.2(r). 

6. 29 C.F.R. § 1630.14(b)(1)(i-iii). 

7. See 42 U.S.C. § 12201(b); 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630 app. §

1630.14(b). 

8. See 42 U.S.C. § 12201(c); 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630 app. §

1630.14(b).  For example, an employer may submit medical

information to the company's health insurance carrier if the

information is needed to administer a health insurance plan in

accordance with § 501(c) of the ADA. 

9. Of course, an employer can always ask about an applicant's

ability to perform the job. 

10. Sometimes, applicants disclose disability-related information

in responding to an otherwise lawful pre-offer question.  Although

the employer has not asked an unlawful question, it still cannot

refuse to hire an applicant based on disability unless the reason

is "job-related and consistent with business necessity." 

11. However, an employer cannot ask a question in a manner that

requires the individual to disclose the need for reasonable

accommodation.  For example, as described later in this guidance,

an employer may not ask, "Can you do these functions with ___

without ___ reasonable accommodation?  (Check One)" 

12. It should be noted that an employer might lawfully ask

questions about the need for reasonable accommodation on the job

and then fail to hire the applicant.  The rejected applicant may

then claim that the refusal to hire was based on the need for

accommodation.  Under these facts, the EEOC will consider the

employer's pre-offer questions as evidence that the employer knew

about the need for reasonable accommodation, and will carefully

scrutinize whether the need to provide accommodation was a reason

for rejecting the applicant. 

13. However, investigators should be aware that Title VII

of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, applies to such

questions and that nothing in this Enforcement Guidance relieves

an employer of its obligations to comply with Title VII.  The

Commission has previously provided guidance for investigators to

follow concerning an employer's use of arrest/conviction records. 

See Policy Guidance No. N-915-061 (9/7/90) ("Policy Guidance on

the Consideration of Arrest Records in Employment Decisions under

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C.

§ 2000e et seq. (1982)"); EEOC Compliance Manual, Vol. II,

Appendices 604-A ("Conviction Records") and 604-B ("Conviction

Records - Statistics"). 

14. "Drug" means a controlled substance, as defined in

schedules I through V of Section 202 of the Controlled Substances

Act (21 U.S.C. § 812).  29 C.F.R. § 1630.3(a)(1). 

15. 42 U.S.C. § 12114(a); 29 C.F.R. § 1630.3(a). 

16. Of course, an employer cannot use a test in violation of other

federal civil rights statutes.  For example, if a test has an

adverse impact under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as

amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., it must be shown to be

job-related and consistent with business necessity. 

17. Although physical agility tests and physical fitness tests