Learn Why It Might Be Better to Help an Employee Overcome an Addiction Than Terminate Him/Her
If you currently know of or have known of an employee that needs drug
and alcohol treatment, it is likely that you are frustrated. As an
employer, you have a range of options available, but the action that
many employers are likely to take is to fire the employee in question.
Employers may think that is this the most practical and viable option.
Dealing with employee drug or alcohol abuse seems troublesome, and
hiring a new employee altogether seems as if it is the best choice for
the company. But that choice may be wrong.
There are numerous reasons why employers may want to consider sending
their employees to a drug and alcohol treatment center. Some of the
reasons are practical - increased job satisfaction, or the use of less
healthcare dollars - but other reasons may actually impact the company's
financial situation. The cost of finding and training new employees is
not inexpensive, and it may actually cost less to send your employee to a
drug and alcohol treatment program rather than to find someone new. The
following include some, but not all, of the reasons to send an employee
to a drug and alcohol treatment program.
Employee Drug or Alcohol Abuse: Reasons to Finance Employee Treatment
- Productivity. Employees who are sent to a drug and
alcohol treatment program will experience a boost in productivity.
Employee drug or alcohol abuse is detrimental to the company - he/she
may not be productive at work because they may be experiencing symptoms
of withdrawal, or they may be trying to recover from the night before.
Either way, employees lacking treatment cannot focus on their tasks at
hand, short-changing the employer and the company. Treatment is
essential to this employee. Afterward, he/she will be more responsive to
their superiors, and in general, he/she will be a healthier employee -
physically and emotionally.
- Job Satisfaction. If an employee suffering from drug or
alcohol addiction is a supervisor in any regard, after treatment, the
employees that they oversee will also experience increased job
satisfaction. Employee drug abuse and alcohol addiction affects everyone
in the workplace. It impacts many functional areas of the company, as
the workplace is heavily impacted by negative attitudes. After
treatment, the employee will be able to perform better at work, managing
their workload and others more efficiently.
- Company Loyalty. Employees who receive drug and alcohol
treatment will be much less likely to injure the company in an
inadvertent way, such as damaging the company's reputation. When
employees are actively using, they are not good ambassadors for the
company or the community. Interactions with clients and co-workers will
suffer, and attendance may often be a problem. However, employees sent
to get treatment will do and feel the opposite - they may experience
feelings of greater loyalty towards a company willing to provide them
with assistance and help while they are dealing with their disease, and
will "pay" the employer back with increased productivity, a boost in
work performance, and company loyalty.
- Recovery Time. Employee drug or alcohol abuse is a
problem that can be treated within a reasonable amount of time. In
residential recovery, employees who receive alcohol and drug treatment
will be expected to attend a treatment facility for four weeks, and can
begin work again in six to eight weeks. This recovery time is relatively
short, especially in comparison to medical leave for lengthy
operational procedures. The recovery time is not extraordinary, and the
benefits, overall, are great.
- Re-training and Re-hiring Costs. The cost to find middle
to high management is substantial, and a missing employee puts a burden
on additional employees to perform extra duties until that position is
filled. Oftentimes, financing these costs can be more expensive than the
cost it takes to send an employee to drug and alcohol treatment. There
are several different costs that employers can expect to pay for when
losing and attempting to replace an employee.
- Separation Costs: These costs may be the costs paid for exit
interviews, administrative duties, separation/severance pay and
unemployment compensation.
- Vacancy Costs: These costs may include the costs paid to
employees who work overtime to take over additional duties, or to find
and hire a temporary employee to take over that specific employee's
tasks.
- Replacement Costs: These costs may include the cost of
attracting applicants, entrance interviews, testing, medical exams and
acquiring and disseminating information.
- Training Costs: These costs may include formal or informal
training costs, literature costs, technology costs, and time spent
learning additional tasks.
- Moral Duty. Sending an employee with a serious health
issue to find drug and alcohol treatment is the right thing to do.
Legally, companies are not allowed to fire employees due to serious
health issues, such as cancer or heart health, but employers are much
more willing to let employees go because of substance abuse or alcohol
addiction - diseases which should be treated as physical and mental
health issues that need to be addressed for the health of the employee.
Summary
Whether an employer chooses to send an employee to seek treatment is
ultimately up to company, but there are numerous reasons - both for the
sake of the employee and for the sake of the company - to send an
employee to receive drug and alcohol treatment, rather than to wish them
well and finance the costs of hiring someone new.