Some doctors in Ottawa say the pile of paperwork they're doing every day has been steadily growing as more public service workers seek doctor's notes in order to receive accommodations to work from home. "The numbers are building up," said Dr. Alykhan Abdulla, a family physician in Manotick.
"So, this has only started since September, we're at about two to five accommodation requests per week." He says there are legitimate medical reasons people are seeking accommodation but there's also a need for healthy skepticism. "You have to have a conversation.
Does this make sense? Does it not make sense? Does it meet the criteria that the government has for accommodations? Or is it something more about standing in opposition against returning back to three days a week," Abdulla said. "Environmental allergies, too much light, too much noise, not having an actual desk, being more worried about COVID in the environment. These things become a little bit more concerning because they don't have true medical correlation or substantiation for the reason why they need the accommodation," he said.
The president of the Canadian Association of Professional Employees (CAPE) says he's not surprised to see the uptick. "It speaks to the work-life balance and the controlled work environment that our members discovered over this last four years," said Nathan Prier. "For a lot of our members working from home meant better mental health, physical health and just better concentration and focus and produc.