Notes: | 1. If the employee is made ill by ingesting food contaminated by workplace contaminants (such as lead), or gets food poisoning from food supplied by the employer, the case would be considered work-related. |
2. Contagious diseases such as tuberculosis, brucellosis, hepatitis A, or plague are considered work-related if the employee is infected at work. |
Table 2
Determining Work-Related Injuries or Illnesses During Travel Status
If the employee has: | The employer may use the following to determine if an injury or illness is work-related. |
Checked into a hotel or motel for one or more days | When a traveling employee checks into a hotel, motel, or into another temporary residence, they establish a "home away from home." The employer must evaluate the employee's activities after they check into the hotel, motel, or other temporary residence for their work-relatedness in the same manner as you evaluate the activities of a nontraveling employee. When the employee checks into the temporary residence, they are considered to have left the work environment. When the employee begins work each day, they reenter the work environment. If the employee has established a "home away from home" and is reporting to a fixed worksite each day, the employer also does not consider injuries or illnesses work-related if they occur while the employee is commuting between the temporary residence and the job location. |
Taken a detour for personal reasons | Injuries or illnesses are not considered work-related if they occur while the employee is on a personal detour from a reasonably direct route of travel (e.g., has taken a side trip for personal reasons). |
Note: | Examples of recordable injury and illnesses that occur when an employee works at home: |
1. If an employee drops a box of work documents and injures their foot, the case is considered work-related. | |
2. If an employee's fingernail is punctured by a needle from a sewing machine used to perform garment work at home, becomes infected and requires medical treatment, the injury is considered work-related. | |
3. If an employee is injured because they trip on the family dog while rushing to answer a work phone call, the case is not considered work-related. | |
4. If an employee working at home is electrocuted because of faulty home wiring, the injury is not considered work-related. |
Wash. Admin. Code § 296-27-01103
Examples of recordable injury and illnesses that occur when an employee works at home:
1. If an employee drops a box of work documents and injures their foot, the case is considered work-related.
2. If an employee's fingernail is punctured by a needle from a sewing machine used to perform garment work at home, becomes infected and requires medical treatment, the injury is considered work-related.
3. If an employee is injured because they trip on the family dog while rushing to answer a work phone call, the case is not considered work-related.
4. If an employee working at home is electrocuted because of faulty home wiring, the injury is not considered work-related.