Health care and service providers

Your role is important in Paid Leave Oregon

 
 

What is Paid Leave Oregon?

Paid Leave Oregon is a program that provides employees with paid time off for family, medical, and safe leave. Learn more about the types of leave people can apply for.

Forensic health nurse discusses how Paid Leave Oregon helps patients

Health care providers

What you need to know

Your role as a health care provider working with Paid Leave is important. We encourage employees who are experiencing a serious health condition or who provide care for a family member with a serious health condition to apply for Paid Leave benefits.

As a provider, when someone in your care is eligible for Paid Leave, you might receive a request from them or their family member to complete a Serious Health Condition Verification Form. Employees must provide this documentation when they send their application for benefits.

Your role with your patients

  • Determine if your patient’s condition qualifies as a serious health condition and how much time they need to care for themselves or for a family member. The length of time should be based on the medical need.
  • Help your patient or their family verify a serious health condition. If your patient or their family member asks you to fill out a verification form, please return it to your patient as soon as possible.

Employees can use any of the following forms of verification:

The document supporting your leave must also include the date your health care provider signed it (must be within 60 days of the start of leave).

We encourage you to have copies of the forms available for your patients and their family members.
Health Care Providers: Family and Medical Leave Fact Sheet
Download
Health Care Providers: Safe Leave Fact Sheet
Download

Key terms

What is a serious health condition under Paid Leave Oregon?

A serious health condition is when a person or their family member has an illness or injury that:

  • Requires inpatient care
  • Poses danger of death or possibility of death in the near future
  • Requires constant or continuing care
  • Involves a period of incapacity
  • Involves multiple treatments
  • Involves a period of disability due to pregnancy
Please read the full definition and all the conditions Paid Leave Oregon considers a serious health condition.

Service providers

What you need to know

Service providers like social workers, police officers, Title IX coordinators, victim service providers, and people who work in adoption agencies or foster care organizations are important to the success of Paid Leave Oregon.

Your role

As a service provider, you can support those you serve as they apply for Paid Leave benefits. Employees who are eligible to apply for Paid Leave benefits include: 

  • Survivors or parents of survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence, harassment, bias crimes or stalking
  • Parents, including foster or adoptive parents, want time to bond with their child during the first year after birth, adoption, or foster care placement

When an employee applies for Paid Leave, they may need to show documentation that verifies their need for leave. As a service provider, you can help them fill out the forms or gather other documents for their Paid Leave application for benefits.

Family leave verification documents
Learn more
Medical leave verification documents
Learn more
Safe leave verification documents
Learn more

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We want to hear from you

Creating Paid Leave Oregon takes all of us. We want to hear your input on the program. If you’d like to participate in an event or ask for a presentation from our team, email us at paidleave@oregon.gov.