on โ09-10-2013 11:03 AM
Oil giant Chevron is under fire for medical questionnaires which ask job applicants if they are pregnant, take birth control, have had an STD or an abortion, among other private issues.
The Maritime Union of Australia has complaints from job applicants, including office staff, who claim they are made to reveal deeply personal information that has no bearing on their work.
The questionnaire has compulsory questions such as whether an applicant is pregnant, capable of getting pregnant, takes birth control or female hormones, their menstruation dates and whether they had ever had an emotional problem or an STD.
Optional questions about reproduction ask whether they or their partner has had an abortion, a stillbirth, a sterilisation or had tried unsuccessfully to conceive over a year.
MUA organiser Matthew Elliott said angry applicants felt pressured to finish the optional section to get the job.
Compulsory questions ask about alcohol and cigarettes.
Lawyer Mark Hemery said many questions, especially about pregnancy and contraception, could breach discrimination laws on gender and disability.
Only medical questions related to a person's ability to perform the role being sought were legal.
Mr Hemery said even the questions relating to reproduction were potentially illegal, despite being optional, because of pressure to comply.
However, he said many of the questions were relevant because they indicated an ability to work long hours, potentially in a hazardous environment far from a major medical facility.
It is understood the same questionnaire is used for all jobs across the US company's global operations.
A Chevron spokeswoman said the information was used solely by medical professionals to assess fitness for work.
She said the company was committed to its employees' health needs, with many mobile or working in remote areas with limited medical care.
Its medical documents were guided by industry standards to ensure staff were safe and fit to work. Medical information was used solely by medical professionals and questions on reproductive history were explicitly voluntary so they were legal.
on โ12-10-2013 06:57 PM
Jean this is the one you are looking for
on โ12-10-2013 08:40 PM
oh wow...
on โ12-10-2013 08:56 PM
They announced on their facebook page last night that they had withdrawn the questionnaire in Australia. The page is now being flooded with angry questions from people in New Zealand and other countries asking for it to be withdrawn there also.
on โ12-10-2013 08:59 PM
Most half way decent employment in the USA includes health insurance, not just for the employed but for the family.
Health insurance is beyond the means of a huge percentage of the population and costs a bomb for the companies who need to know the lifestyles and risks with potential employees.
An aside......Obamacare is trying to get Medicare type health care for Americans. This is what the current crisis in the USA is about. The Republicans don't want it.
Get long or short term treatment for a serious (potential deadly) problem in the USA without insurance......in your dreams.
I know of retirees who went back to work just to get health insurance.
on โ12-10-2013 09:09 PM
Health insurance is beyond the means of a huge percentage of the population
really.... a huge percentage?
care to elaborate freshy
on โ12-10-2013 10:14 PM
Ibis, google is your friend.
Having lived in the USA for 17 years and having an adult American daughter I have lived under the system.
The priority when seeking employment is health insurance.
The cost of health care is off the planet.
on โ12-10-2013 10:22 PM
i did google it. thats why i asked about the huge percentage statement
on โ12-10-2013 10:46 PM
Ibis, the number varies from state to state. However, at the last national sensus over 50 million Americans had NO health insurance.
They cannot believe the Medicare we have here, and in other countries including Canada.
Even those with insurance have many exclusions.
on โ12-10-2013 10:58 PM
Census Bureau data
In 2012, the bureau said, 15.4 percent of people were uninsured, down from 15.7 percent in 2011
IMO i would not call that a huge percentage
but whatever