News7 mins ago
Heavy Lifting At Work - In Pregnancy
4 Answers
Hi guys, I have a question regarding pregnancy and was hoping that you guys could help. My girlfriend is 5' 2, 7 & half stone and 7 weeks pregnant. She has been working in a hospital hsdu department 2 years. This involves lifting, loading and pushing trolleys of heavy surgical instrument trays and boxes. She has experienced some abdominal pain and bleeding in the pregnancy and has poly cystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and been instructed by her doctor not to lift heavy loads (been given a note by the doctor - the doctor had written "avoid heavy lifting, should be put on light duties"). However, my girlfriend's boss say that as the note did not specify how much she could lift safely, she spoke with the occupational health nurse who has told her that it is safe to lift up to 30kg in pregnancy. They are doing pretty much nothing to give her lighter work duties.
My girlfriend weighed a box that she had to lift above her head, onto the top of a trolley yesterday and it weighed 10kg but was already straining in order to do so.
In addition, her boss is planning on sending her to a different department where there is less lifting for only 3 weeks. My girlfriend's boss said that she could resume normal duties once she is 12 weeks pregnant and entering into the second trimester. Do you have any advice on this, because she is thinking of complaining to HR but wants to know if she has a leg to stand on? She does not want make the situation more difficult.
My girlfriend weighed a box that she had to lift above her head, onto the top of a trolley yesterday and it weighed 10kg but was already straining in order to do so.
In addition, her boss is planning on sending her to a different department where there is less lifting for only 3 weeks. My girlfriend's boss said that she could resume normal duties once she is 12 weeks pregnant and entering into the second trimester. Do you have any advice on this, because she is thinking of complaining to HR but wants to know if she has a leg to stand on? She does not want make the situation more difficult.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by infoplease1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.