Article on TN hospital barring any job applicants if nicotine is found in their system. Dr. Michael Seigel commented in the article.
Tennessee Hospital Is Hiring; Smokers Need Not Apply - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News - FOXNews.com
Ohio doesn't protect any nicotine use either- the local hospitals, some of them, will not hire anyone with nicotine in their system.
The hospital I work in has instituted tests that are not mandatory but if you don't take them annually, you pay 400 a month more in health insurance costs.
On any of several categories (obesity, blood pressure, nicotine, cholesterol, blood sugar) you get charged 50 bux a month per category if you "flunk" them and are not under treatment.
The exception is nicotine, where it doesn't matter if it's treatment, not treatment, vaping, patch, gum, whatever- it's a cash penalty for having it in your system.
Our performance increases are also tied to "healthy behaviors" like gym memberships, seeing a doc regularly, attending classes on health issues, etc., which you have to document "4 behaviours or participations" with receipts and attestations of participation that show you are committed to "wellness". This has a direct bearing on how much you might get as a raise in any given year.
So you can be penalized 400 a month for not getting your blood drawn and going through your "physical" and then have whether you get a raise or not affected by "healthy behaviours".
As a Nurse, I am ambivalent about all this- I don't like the intrusiveness, but I do appreciate the fact that we do need to raise consciousness about what makes for healthier living.
The struggles of folks that have been debilitated by obesity or analogs or *shiver* diabetes, joint problems, cancers, etc. are truly awful.
The ravages on older aged patients that leave them with a life that means maybe nothing more than moving from chair to bed to chair to bed to .... huffing, puffing, and in pain most of the time just plain - suck. Not to mention the younger folk who are statistically unlucky, or anyone that has had a stroke...
I don't like the idea of a nanny state. I don't like limited freedoms. Neither do I think anyone who says they realize the risks they are taking (just like I did for so long) can really appreciate what life on the other side of a failed risk is
really like. There's not a one of them that says "I'd do it all over again".
I'm not advocating the way things are being done now, but I wish there was a way to make sure everyone was truly enlightened about the value of healthy behaviors (and vaping is going in the right direction towards that) and how to minimize risk, because the consequences are so... icky.