I guess it's possible I could be miscommunicating with doctors. However, I just get the impression they are completely on a different planet.
What I would say: "Hi, I need a doctor's note about my nerve damage so I can work from home. It's painful. I use a walker/cane. Half my office works from home and there's a stupid rule saying I live 10 miles too far away. If I get a doctor's note, that will likely be ok and let me work from home. Can I please do that and I will do whatever to make that as easy as possible for you. Thank you."
What they seem to hear: "Hum, for some evil reason this person who PT, medications, nerve block injections and other things hasn't worked wants a doctor's note. Plus, she refused surgery (neurectomy)!? I must not give doctor note! it is a precious resource and must be guarded. I must force her to come in for at least 3 more in person examinations which will cost $300 a piece in copays so I can sit there, collect money, prescribe nothing but opioids she won't take and bill more!"
I do not get their reservation on this, at all. I see exactly 0 reason they can't write something like,
Dear Sir or Madam,
My name is [Doctor's name] and I have treated Ms. [My name] for 7 years. She has nerve pain in the following nerves [list of nerves]. This causes her symptoms such as pain when walking and to use a walker or cane when walking. She has tried physical therapy, and nerve block injections but no relief resulted. I understand your company employs her and requires a physician note to permit her to work from home. Allowing her to work from home would result in less pain and related symptoms. It would be a reasonable accommodation to permit her to continue doing her work from home. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact my office at [Doctor's office phone number] or [email].
Sincerely,
[Doctor's name]
Heck they could even put something like this and I'd be fine with it:
Limitation: This letter is for the purpose of allowing Ms. [My name] to work from home remotely only. This is not an endorsement of disability status for purposes of receiving disability benefits from the social security administration, veteran's administration or other agency.
But for some strange reason, I call up the scheduler who asks me what I would like an appointment for and then they treat me like I'm not making any sense at all. No clue what to do.
Also, thank you, Quarque it is frustrating. Half my coworkers work from home full time. The one girl who uses a walker/cane, can't because she's 10 miles too far... I couldn't make this crap up if I tried. I guess they don't want people moving too far away when they get full remote so they put a distance on it, but come on....
The job market is supposed to be better, but also when you're disabled it's different. I mean basically I'm not Einstein, but I'm not stupid. People still look at me like I'm dumb though. They see someone who has uses a walker or has more difficulty with a cane and then think there's something wrong with me mentally. Clearly, I can type on a keyboard..... I'm good at my job. I routinely get 4.6 out of 5.0 ratings (I've been told nobody gets a perfect 5.0). I don't cause issues and I'm good at my job. Leaving seems risky and it's really easy to end up unemployed when you're disabled. It would be hard to get disability benefits if that happened and I would rather not have to get those anyhow, because I'd rather work. [/list]
I think one of the issues may be that I just tough through it and don't go to the doctor a lot. This seems to baffle them. It's incredibly simple. I live in America, the land of Medical Debt and doctors are expensive. I have insurance, the copays are $300... a pop. Why O why have I not been going to the doctor every few weeks... Well, let's see if I went 12 times a year (once per month) that'd be $300 x 12 = $3,600 I don't have with the cost of living doubling recently with inflation.... The sarcasm ... it just kinda drips, I know and I'm sorry for that, but it's a coping mechanism. I just bugs me they can't comprehend that.