Background of the Case
A former employee (the plaintiff) of NextGen Healthcare, Inc. attended a sales conference for her employer in 2018. That evening, the plaintiff knocked on the door of her male coworker’s room in the same hotel. The plaintiff entered the coworker’s room, climbed into his bed, and became unresponsive. The coworker reported the incident to the company’s human resource department. Subsequently, the human resources department placed the plaintiff on a paid leave of absence. The plaintiff’s medical provider later diagnosed her with somnambulism, or “sleepwalking disorder.” The diagnosis served as a basis for her argument that a medical condition had caused the behavior. However, NextGen Healthcare Inc. had already terminated her employment. The plaintiff sued her employer in a district court, alleging the employer violated her rights under the ADA and the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act (TCHRA).Disability Protections Under the ADA
Signed into law in 1990, the ADA is a federal law that protects the civil rights of individuals with disabilities. The ADA forbids discrimination in the workplace and other sectors of society against people living with disabilities. Covered individuals may show they have a disability in one of three ways:- they have a physical or mental condition that substantially limits a major life activity (walking, talking, seeing, learning, etc.)
- a person has a history of disability (for example, cancer that is in remission)
- this person is subject to an adverse employment action, and their impairment is not transitory or minor