Pre-employment screening is usually conducted by business executives for potential employees that applied for jobs.
It is not strange to have the
employers going out of bound during the Pre employment test, however, there are
rules of thumb to follow.
These rules are industry standards
to protect the interests and privacy of both the employers and the employees,
says chaktty.
The following are some of the criteria of Pre employment screening test.
Relevance to the activity
Whether certain pre-employment examinations are sensible and permissible or not can best be seen from the
principle that the medical suitability to be examined must be relevant to
the job in question.
The resilience of the legs will not
play a role in a predominantly sedentary activity, so a corresponding
examination is then neither useful nor permissible without the consent of the
person concerned.
Questions about health and health
examinations that are not related to the job can therefore be rejected
by future employees and applicants.
According to health-pally, Questions
about the health situation in the applicant's family are also not permitted.
In practice, however, many will
still agree to the recruitment tests and questions in order to still get a job
in the tight labor market.
It is questionable whether there can
still be talk of genuine voluntariness.
In general, inadmissible questions
may even be answered incorrectly.
Without concrete evidence or
suspicion, no blood or urine tests may be carried out to detect alcohol or
drug consumption.
Unless the applicant or new employee
expressly agrees to this and is informed in detail about the scope of the test.
Genetic suitability tests are also not permitted either, according to sexpally.
Permitted information,
confidentiality and data protection
Recruitment examinations are usually
the responsibility of the company doctor. However, the latter may not ask
more permissible questions than the employer.
Only health-related questions that
are directly related to the job and the employee themselves are permitted and
must therefore be answered truthfully to a certain extent.
Which questions these are depends on
the individual case.
According to a judgment of the
Federal Labor Court of June 7th, 1984, Az.: 2 AZR 270/80, the right of the
employer or company doctor to ask questions extends to the following points:
· Questions
about health suitability for the intended job (for example, is there
an illness that permanently or repeatedly restricts the exercise of
the job?)
· Questions
about endangering other employees or customers (such as contagious
diseases)
· Questions
about health factors that could result in disability within
the next six months (such as a difficult operation) usually but not
the frequent question about pregnancy.
The specific examination results are
also subject to medical confidentiality in the case of the
pre-employment examination.
The company doctor may only pass on the suitability itself, but not the exact diagnosis, to the future employer.
Conclusion
Fnd the permissible level in
recruitment examinations.
Pre-employment screening can thus be
an important part of health care in the workplace if the screening is for
health and safety reasons. However, they must not exceed the legal
framework.
0 Comments