Should Employers Be Permitted not to Hire Smokers? A Review of US Legal Provisions

Authors

  • Harald Schmidt Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
  • Rishi R. Patel College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA
Abstract:

Background Increasingly, healthcare and non-healthcare employers prohibit or penalize the use of tobacco products among current and new employees in the United States. Despite this trend, and for a range of different reasons, around half of states currently legally protect employees from being denied positions, or having employment contracts terminated, due to tobacco use.   Methods We undertook a conceptual analysis of legal provisions in all 50 states.   Results We found ethically relevant variations in terms of how tobacco is defined, which employee populations are protected, and to what extent they are protected. Furthermore, the underlying ethical rationales for smoker protection differ, and can be grouped into two main categories: prevention of discrimination and protection of privacy.   Conclusion We critically discuss these rationales and the role of their advocates and argue that enabling equality of opportunity is a more adequate overarching concept for preventing employers from disadvantaging smokers.

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Journal title

volume 6  issue 12

pages  701- 706

publication date 2017-12-01

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