Should I mention my doctor’s appointment at my meeting with HR?

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up vote
34
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Recently, I was involved in an incident where an employee sprayed air from one of the compressed tanks we use for the soda machines at my face, resulting in my loss of hearing for three seconds following.



I reported the incident as soon as I was able to get one of my managers one-on-one, and while the incident has been reported and a punishment issued (no idea how much further it’ll go for the other person), I have had a sore throat and a rather nasty cough for the last three days. For context, this happened on a Saturday evening.



I have an appointment to see HR this afternoon and provide more details and sign off on their report, but I don’t know whether I should mention my doctor’s appointment as well.



I will be mentioning this incident to my doctor since I feel there is a possibility it is related to my current condition. However, I cannot come to a decision as to whether to inform HR. It seems like I should, but I do not want to cast suspicions or otherwise alter anyone’s perspectives without knowing for certain or with a great deal of certainty that this current ailment is related to this incident, especially since I will be seeing the doctor for another issue that has been present since before Saturday.



My question is simple: Do I inform HR now or wait for the doctor’s conclusion to say anything?







share|improve this question


















  • 15




    You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
    – mkennedy
    Aug 23 at 16:35






  • 9




    I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
    – JonH
    Aug 23 at 16:52






  • 24




    @JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
    – Mark
    Aug 23 at 21:14






  • 2




    @BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
    – Pleiades
    Aug 24 at 4:05






  • 7




    @BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
    – Belle-Sophie
    Aug 24 at 6:25
















up vote
34
down vote

favorite
1












Recently, I was involved in an incident where an employee sprayed air from one of the compressed tanks we use for the soda machines at my face, resulting in my loss of hearing for three seconds following.



I reported the incident as soon as I was able to get one of my managers one-on-one, and while the incident has been reported and a punishment issued (no idea how much further it’ll go for the other person), I have had a sore throat and a rather nasty cough for the last three days. For context, this happened on a Saturday evening.



I have an appointment to see HR this afternoon and provide more details and sign off on their report, but I don’t know whether I should mention my doctor’s appointment as well.



I will be mentioning this incident to my doctor since I feel there is a possibility it is related to my current condition. However, I cannot come to a decision as to whether to inform HR. It seems like I should, but I do not want to cast suspicions or otherwise alter anyone’s perspectives without knowing for certain or with a great deal of certainty that this current ailment is related to this incident, especially since I will be seeing the doctor for another issue that has been present since before Saturday.



My question is simple: Do I inform HR now or wait for the doctor’s conclusion to say anything?







share|improve this question


















  • 15




    You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
    – mkennedy
    Aug 23 at 16:35






  • 9




    I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
    – JonH
    Aug 23 at 16:52






  • 24




    @JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
    – Mark
    Aug 23 at 21:14






  • 2




    @BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
    – Pleiades
    Aug 24 at 4:05






  • 7




    @BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
    – Belle-Sophie
    Aug 24 at 6:25












up vote
34
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
34
down vote

favorite
1






1





Recently, I was involved in an incident where an employee sprayed air from one of the compressed tanks we use for the soda machines at my face, resulting in my loss of hearing for three seconds following.



I reported the incident as soon as I was able to get one of my managers one-on-one, and while the incident has been reported and a punishment issued (no idea how much further it’ll go for the other person), I have had a sore throat and a rather nasty cough for the last three days. For context, this happened on a Saturday evening.



I have an appointment to see HR this afternoon and provide more details and sign off on their report, but I don’t know whether I should mention my doctor’s appointment as well.



I will be mentioning this incident to my doctor since I feel there is a possibility it is related to my current condition. However, I cannot come to a decision as to whether to inform HR. It seems like I should, but I do not want to cast suspicions or otherwise alter anyone’s perspectives without knowing for certain or with a great deal of certainty that this current ailment is related to this incident, especially since I will be seeing the doctor for another issue that has been present since before Saturday.



My question is simple: Do I inform HR now or wait for the doctor’s conclusion to say anything?







share|improve this question














Recently, I was involved in an incident where an employee sprayed air from one of the compressed tanks we use for the soda machines at my face, resulting in my loss of hearing for three seconds following.



I reported the incident as soon as I was able to get one of my managers one-on-one, and while the incident has been reported and a punishment issued (no idea how much further it’ll go for the other person), I have had a sore throat and a rather nasty cough for the last three days. For context, this happened on a Saturday evening.



I have an appointment to see HR this afternoon and provide more details and sign off on their report, but I don’t know whether I should mention my doctor’s appointment as well.



I will be mentioning this incident to my doctor since I feel there is a possibility it is related to my current condition. However, I cannot come to a decision as to whether to inform HR. It seems like I should, but I do not want to cast suspicions or otherwise alter anyone’s perspectives without knowing for certain or with a great deal of certainty that this current ailment is related to this incident, especially since I will be seeing the doctor for another issue that has been present since before Saturday.



My question is simple: Do I inform HR now or wait for the doctor’s conclusion to say anything?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 23 at 14:33









Mister Positive

54.4k27177224




54.4k27177224










asked Aug 23 at 13:22









Pleiades

9512613




9512613







  • 15




    You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
    – mkennedy
    Aug 23 at 16:35






  • 9




    I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
    – JonH
    Aug 23 at 16:52






  • 24




    @JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
    – Mark
    Aug 23 at 21:14






  • 2




    @BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
    – Pleiades
    Aug 24 at 4:05






  • 7




    @BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
    – Belle-Sophie
    Aug 24 at 6:25












  • 15




    You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
    – mkennedy
    Aug 23 at 16:35






  • 9




    I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
    – JonH
    Aug 23 at 16:52






  • 24




    @JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
    – Mark
    Aug 23 at 21:14






  • 2




    @BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
    – Pleiades
    Aug 24 at 4:05






  • 7




    @BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
    – Belle-Sophie
    Aug 24 at 6:25







15




15




You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
– mkennedy
Aug 23 at 16:35




You should also tell your doctor (front desk clerk) up-front that this might turn into a worker's compensation claim. There's special paperwork for that. The urgent care facility that I use has a checkbox on their form, for instance.
– mkennedy
Aug 23 at 16:35




9




9




I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
– JonH
Aug 23 at 16:52




I cannot understand why compressed air would cause a sore throat or a bad cough. Sounds like you have an infection?
– JonH
Aug 23 at 16:52




24




24




@JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
– Mark
Aug 23 at 21:14




@JonH, when air is compressed, it's usually also dried to prevent rust build-up in the tank. When it expands again, it cools off dramatically; a compressed-air nozzle can cool to the point that ice forms on it even in the summer. Your throat does not do well in extremely cold, dry air.
– Mark
Aug 23 at 21:14




2




2




@BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
– Pleiades
Aug 24 at 4:05




@BenCrowell I mean yes, but there’s no existing record on this site of what to do if an illness/injury is suspected following a workplace accident or incident. What may be common knowledge to the average person may not be to younger or less experienced persons such as myself.
– Pleiades
Aug 24 at 4:05




7




7




@BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
– Belle-Sophie
Aug 24 at 6:25




@BenCrowell Didn't we abolish the too localised close reason long ago?
– Belle-Sophie
Aug 24 at 6:25










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
79
down vote














Do I inform HR now




Yes.



At this point since HR is involved, be open and honest and tell them everything related to the incident. If you're going to the doctor due to what happened, then yes you need to tell them.



I am not a fan of getting HR involved in anything unless you have to, but when you do, be completely transparent as it relates to the incident HR is involved in. Lying or omitting anything will look very bad on you should it come out down the road.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4




    Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
    – Snow♦
    Aug 23 at 13:29






  • 2




    If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
    – Pleiades
    Aug 23 at 13:56






  • 3




    @Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
    – Mister Positive
    Aug 23 at 13:59







  • 1




    You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
    – 3kstc
    Aug 24 at 3:21






  • 2




    @Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
    – Doc
    Aug 24 at 4:40

















up vote
1
down vote













Since your HR appointment is scheduled before the appointment with your doctor, I don't see how waiting for the doctor's conclusion is an option.



During your meeting with the HR you should mention your health issues, and that you're currently not certain whether these are related to the incident or to a condition you had since before Saturday. Tell them when your doctor's appointment is, and ask them if they will want any special forms filled by the doctor.



This will give the HR a clear deadline for gathering all the information, after which they will be able to decide how to proceed.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
    – bruglesco
    Aug 24 at 14:52










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2 Answers
2






active

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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
79
down vote














Do I inform HR now




Yes.



At this point since HR is involved, be open and honest and tell them everything related to the incident. If you're going to the doctor due to what happened, then yes you need to tell them.



I am not a fan of getting HR involved in anything unless you have to, but when you do, be completely transparent as it relates to the incident HR is involved in. Lying or omitting anything will look very bad on you should it come out down the road.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4




    Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
    – Snow♦
    Aug 23 at 13:29






  • 2




    If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
    – Pleiades
    Aug 23 at 13:56






  • 3




    @Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
    – Mister Positive
    Aug 23 at 13:59







  • 1




    You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
    – 3kstc
    Aug 24 at 3:21






  • 2




    @Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
    – Doc
    Aug 24 at 4:40














up vote
79
down vote














Do I inform HR now




Yes.



At this point since HR is involved, be open and honest and tell them everything related to the incident. If you're going to the doctor due to what happened, then yes you need to tell them.



I am not a fan of getting HR involved in anything unless you have to, but when you do, be completely transparent as it relates to the incident HR is involved in. Lying or omitting anything will look very bad on you should it come out down the road.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4




    Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
    – Snow♦
    Aug 23 at 13:29






  • 2




    If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
    – Pleiades
    Aug 23 at 13:56






  • 3




    @Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
    – Mister Positive
    Aug 23 at 13:59







  • 1




    You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
    – 3kstc
    Aug 24 at 3:21






  • 2




    @Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
    – Doc
    Aug 24 at 4:40












up vote
79
down vote










up vote
79
down vote










Do I inform HR now




Yes.



At this point since HR is involved, be open and honest and tell them everything related to the incident. If you're going to the doctor due to what happened, then yes you need to tell them.



I am not a fan of getting HR involved in anything unless you have to, but when you do, be completely transparent as it relates to the incident HR is involved in. Lying or omitting anything will look very bad on you should it come out down the road.






share|improve this answer















Do I inform HR now




Yes.



At this point since HR is involved, be open and honest and tell them everything related to the incident. If you're going to the doctor due to what happened, then yes you need to tell them.



I am not a fan of getting HR involved in anything unless you have to, but when you do, be completely transparent as it relates to the incident HR is involved in. Lying or omitting anything will look very bad on you should it come out down the road.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 23 at 14:37









Kate Gregory

105k40232334




105k40232334










answered Aug 23 at 13:25









Mister Positive

54.4k27177224




54.4k27177224







  • 4




    Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
    – Snow♦
    Aug 23 at 13:29






  • 2




    If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
    – Pleiades
    Aug 23 at 13:56






  • 3




    @Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
    – Mister Positive
    Aug 23 at 13:59







  • 1




    You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
    – 3kstc
    Aug 24 at 3:21






  • 2




    @Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
    – Doc
    Aug 24 at 4:40












  • 4




    Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
    – Snow♦
    Aug 23 at 13:29






  • 2




    If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
    – Pleiades
    Aug 23 at 13:56






  • 3




    @Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
    – Mister Positive
    Aug 23 at 13:59







  • 1




    You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
    – 3kstc
    Aug 24 at 3:21






  • 2




    @Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
    – Doc
    Aug 24 at 4:40







4




4




Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
– Snow♦
Aug 23 at 13:29




Yep. Let HR decide what is and isn't relevant to this situation.
– Snow♦
Aug 23 at 13:29




2




2




If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
– Pleiades
Aug 23 at 13:56




If it does come out that my illness is related to this incident, what would my course of action be from there? (Might be better as a separate question but someone I know keeps mentioning that it’s a workman comp thing and I am COMPLETELY in the dark on that)
– Pleiades
Aug 23 at 13:56




3




3




@Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
– Mister Positive
Aug 23 at 13:59





@Pleiades I would assume that you would be paid if you were unable to work due to the fact that you were injured on the job. That being said, see what HR says, and if its not fair get a lawyer. These laws differ state to state. This will also depend on how long you need to recover.
– Mister Positive
Aug 23 at 13:59





1




1




You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
– 3kstc
Aug 24 at 3:21




You might want to seek some advise from a Union rep, as they often make sure the company isn't cutting any corners.
– 3kstc
Aug 24 at 3:21




2




2




@Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
– Doc
Aug 24 at 4:40




@Pleiades If it does turn out that your illness is related to the incident, and said illness is even moderately serious (rather than, "oh, you'll just have a sore throat for a few days"), I'd strongly recommend to talk to a lawyer (if you are a member of a union, they likely have lawyers on hand). You might have a strong case for compensation.
– Doc
Aug 24 at 4:40












up vote
1
down vote













Since your HR appointment is scheduled before the appointment with your doctor, I don't see how waiting for the doctor's conclusion is an option.



During your meeting with the HR you should mention your health issues, and that you're currently not certain whether these are related to the incident or to a condition you had since before Saturday. Tell them when your doctor's appointment is, and ask them if they will want any special forms filled by the doctor.



This will give the HR a clear deadline for gathering all the information, after which they will be able to decide how to proceed.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
    – bruglesco
    Aug 24 at 14:52














up vote
1
down vote













Since your HR appointment is scheduled before the appointment with your doctor, I don't see how waiting for the doctor's conclusion is an option.



During your meeting with the HR you should mention your health issues, and that you're currently not certain whether these are related to the incident or to a condition you had since before Saturday. Tell them when your doctor's appointment is, and ask them if they will want any special forms filled by the doctor.



This will give the HR a clear deadline for gathering all the information, after which they will be able to decide how to proceed.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
    – bruglesco
    Aug 24 at 14:52












up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









Since your HR appointment is scheduled before the appointment with your doctor, I don't see how waiting for the doctor's conclusion is an option.



During your meeting with the HR you should mention your health issues, and that you're currently not certain whether these are related to the incident or to a condition you had since before Saturday. Tell them when your doctor's appointment is, and ask them if they will want any special forms filled by the doctor.



This will give the HR a clear deadline for gathering all the information, after which they will be able to decide how to proceed.






share|improve this answer












Since your HR appointment is scheduled before the appointment with your doctor, I don't see how waiting for the doctor's conclusion is an option.



During your meeting with the HR you should mention your health issues, and that you're currently not certain whether these are related to the incident or to a condition you had since before Saturday. Tell them when your doctor's appointment is, and ask them if they will want any special forms filled by the doctor.



This will give the HR a clear deadline for gathering all the information, after which they will be able to decide how to proceed.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 24 at 12:56









Dmitry Grigoryev

4,29811335




4,29811335







  • 2




    Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
    – bruglesco
    Aug 24 at 14:52












  • 2




    Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
    – bruglesco
    Aug 24 at 14:52







2




2




Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
– bruglesco
Aug 24 at 14:52




Don't mention a possible previous condition. Let the doctor figure that out.
– bruglesco
Aug 24 at 14:52

















 

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