Article

Is Addiction a Safety Risk in the Workplace?

Topic: Addiction and RecoveryBy Nicholas BarryPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 2,154 legacy views

I was talking to a human resource manager a few weeks ago about an employee who worked in his company. This employee was driving a company car and there had been numerous complaints from other employees that this man had alcohol on his breath at various times throughout the day. The HR manager said that the employee was almost ready to admit that he had a problem and that they could finally do something.

I asked, “What if the employee killed a child in a motor vehicle accident before he admitted he needed help and you had prior knowledge of a this serious safety situation?” “I see what you mean,” he said and wanted some advice from me.” I suggested that he should take the employee out of that car immediately until he could get a substance abuse professional (SAP) to assess him for addiction and to see what the SAP recommended. The SAP will either recommend treatment or education depending on the nature and seriousness of the problem. The company will then have a written treatment plan and documentation to promote further action.

The manager was conce
ed with human rights of the employee. I was conce
ed for the child or others that could be killed or maimed if nothing was done while people were waiting for this man to get help on his own. My primary conce
as a Substance Abuse Professional is the safety of the public and the other employees working with an addicted employee. The employee and his or her rights are secondary to the safety of others. The idea is to address the safety conce
s first.

What constitutes reasonable cause to ask an employee to undertake a SAP assessment for addiction? What sort of things should a manager look for while observing or hearing about this employee? nn· Alcohol on the breath. (That one is pretty obvious and serious)n· Drunk driving or other charges related to alcohol or drugs. n· There are physiological and physical symptoms one can learn and be attentive to.n· Erratic work performance, especially, from someone who was very good at their job. (Look for changes)n· Absenteeism is especially useful clue that the person has a problem with something.n· Rumours are useful. They can help you to establish a pattern if there are enough of them.n· Unreasonable excuses for being away or not completing tasks on time. n· Moodiness and problems with other employees.
(I have a checklist on my site called Checklist for Managers that lists many subtle clues)

How do you know if it is addiction? Actually, you really do not know if it is an addiction. You would not know that until the person is professionally assessed. You may suspect but unless you have some sort of specialized knowledge and training you would not be able to diagnose this your self. Besides, you do not want or need all of that personal information that an addiction assessment gains, nor would the employee want to give it to you. That personal information needed for the assessment must stay with a third party for confidentiality reasons. That is another reason to us a SAP.

If you think that something is not right, there is a policy violation or that a person has an alcohol or drug problem, you should be documenting the behaviour. You are trying to build a case that something is wrong and it would be reasonable to assume that it may be addiction. To correct policy violations or improve employee behaviour is one of your functions. That is your job. That is solution-focussed intervention. Whether it is addiction or not you will have to deal with it and take steps to correct it. The SAP interview will move you to a solution. Either the person accepts the help or they do not. Are you going to let someone work with the smell of alcohol or break other company rules without taking action? It is not inhumane to ask people to be responsible for their behaviour, especially, when that behaviour has the potential to harm the employee or others.

In my seminars I hear of some really horrific cases that employees and mangers appear to be putting up with that in my opinion could be solved with some action. My on-site seminar includes a slide that says," Addicted people do not get help because they see the light but because they feel the heat on their ___. “ In the 22 years that I have been in the addiction business, I have found that to be true especially when the workplace is actively trying to help. Everyone that I have ever personally known or heard about who has recovered from addiction, has done so only when the chips were down never when they were on a roll. Something happened in their life to make them see that there is a problem.

The workplace is uniquely able to influence the employee in such a way as to get them to look at himself or herself long enough to see that there is a problem. The choice is then theirs to do something about it.

I have lots of success stories and other useful information to share with you to make you job easier. Please feel free to visit my website.

Article author

About the Author

Nicholas Barry is a Substance Abuse Professional working in Saint John New Brunswick. He sees individuals and also conducts seminars on “Addiction in the Workplace” to assist supervisors and managers to find a solution to this growing problem. Nicholas Barry, MSW, ICADC Addiction Consulting Servicesn451 Ridge Row, Saint John, NB, Canada, E2M 4A2 Phone: 506-672-2618 Email: nick@addictionconsulting.com Web: addictionconsulting.com

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

If you live with an alcoholic you will almost certainly feel shame. Some people will experience it to a very high level others less so but almost everyone who lives with an alcoholic experiences it to some degree. You will probably feel anxious that people will discover your secret, that they will judge you and, inevitably, will find you unacceptable to be around decent people. Seeing it written down like that it probably seems stupid. How could anyone feel that.

Related piece

Article

Myth #1: Drug addiction is voluntary behavior. A person starts out as an occasional drug user, and that is a voluntary decision. But as times passes, something happens, and that person goes from being a voluntary drug user to being a compulsive drug user. Why? Because over time, continued use of addictive drugs changes your brain -- at times in dramatic, toxic ways, at others in more subtle ways, but virtually always in ways that result in compulsive and even uncontrollable drug use. Myth #2: More than anything else, drug addiction is a character flaw.

Related piece

Article

When you have a suspicion your teen is doing drugs, what do you do? First, learn as much as you can. Check out all of SelfGrowth.com for information on drug and alcohol use by teens. Know that there is help available for you and your child. In most communities, you can get help from your pediatrician, nurse, or other health care provider, a counselor at your child's school, or your faith community.

Related piece

Article

Are you one of many people who live with someone who drinks heavily? Do you wonder whether your partner is an alcoholic. Well you are certainly not alone. For many people living with problem drinkers means agony and confusion wondering whether their partner is actually an alcoholic or whether they are making a fuss about nothing. This is a very real problem for many reasons.

Related piece