Objective: To analyze the medical–legal framework regarding drunkenness as grounds for termination of the employment relationship in Argentina, Peru, Costa Rica, and Mexico, considering alcoholism as a disease and its implications for occupational health.
Methods: A documentary and comparative review of labor legislation, jurisprudence, and doctrine was conducted in the four countries. Additionally, medical literature on alcoholism published between 2000 and 2023 was reviewed, using PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, WHO, and ILO sources [1–3,5,9,13].
Results: Although labor laws in Latin America recognize drunkenness as just cause for dismissal [4–7], judicial practice has progressively incorporated principles of proportionality, human dignity, and the right to health [13,14]. National jurisprudence shows variability: while some courts uphold dismissal, others consider alcoholism a disease requiring treatment and rehabilitation [16–21]. The medical literature highlights the health burden of alcohol use and the need for workplace interventions focused on prevention and reintegration [9–12,22].
Conclusion: Dismissal due solely to drunkenness is insufficient without evidence of recurrence, direct harm to productivity, or risk to third-party integrity. A balanced approach integrating occupational health policies, rehabilitation measures, and proportional sanctions is recommended.
Keywords: Drunkenness; alcoholism; labor law; occupational health; dismissal.
The issue of alcohol intoxication in the workplace requires not only a legal but also a public health approach [11,22]. Although Latin American labor codes have historically maintained drunkenness as grounds for dismissal [4–7], the recognition of alcoholism as a chronic disease compels us to reconsider punitive measures in favor of preventive and rehabilitative interventions [1–3,9,10]. Beyond national regulations, the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the World Health Organization (WHO) have emphasized that workplace health strategies must integrate substance abuse policies, support systems, and reintegration mechanisms for affected workers [12,15]. This introduction highlights the multidimensional nature of the problem, combining occupational safety, human dignity, labor productivity, and healthcare obligations [13,14]. In this sense, analyzing the medical–legal framework in Argentina, Peru, Costa Rica, and Mexico allows us to understand the extent to which jurisprudence has evolved from a punitive approach toward one of balance between labor discipline and the right to health [16–21].
The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10 and ICD-11) recognizes alcohol-related disorders as clinical entities requiring diagnosis and treatment [1,2]. Alcoholism is defined as a harmful consumption pattern characterized by dependence, tolerance, and withdrawal syndrome [3]. Its consequences include alcoholic liver disease, peripheral neuropathy, cognitive decline, and increased morbidity and mortality [9,10]. In the workplace, it negatively affects concentration, coordination, and decision-making, thereby increasing the risk of occupational accidents [11]. From the standpoint of occupational medicine, prevention, early detection, and rehabilitation are recommended [12].
Latin American labor law recognizes the figure of termination of the employment relationship for just cause [4–7]. In most jurisdictions, drunkenness during working hours is expressly included as grounds for dismissal. However, courts have nuanced this provision by applying the principles of proportionality, human dignity, and the right to health [13,14]. Comparative law has evolved toward the humanization of labor relations, considering alcoholism as a disease that limits automatic sanctions, in accordance with International Labour Organization (ILO) conventions [15].
A documentary and comparative review of labor legislation, judicial criteria, and doctrine in Argentina, Peru, Costa Rica, and Mexico was conducted, complemented with medical literature on alcoholism published between 2000 and 2023 [3,6,9]. Academic databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science), WHO and ILO documents, as well as relevant national jurisprudence, were consulted [5,13].
Argentina
The Labor Contract Law contemplates drunkenness as grounds for dismissal [4]. Jurisprudence is divergent: some rulings reject termination by recognizing alcoholism as a disease [16], while others uphold it as serious labor misconduct. The Supreme Court has held that recurrence and direct impairment of productivity justify sanctions [17].
Peru
The Law on Labor Productivity and Competitiveness defines repeated drunkenness as a serious offense [5]. However, the Constitutional Court has considered dismissal disproportionate in the absence of prior disciplinary records, ordering reinstatement in certain cases [18].
Costa Rica
The Labor Code expressly prohibits presenting to work under the influence of alcohol [6]. Nevertheless, courts have privileged proportionality, overturning dismissals when the sanction is deemed excessive [19]. There is also an observable requirement for occupational health programs [20].
Mexico
The Federal Labor Law, Article 47, Section XIII, establishes drunkenness as grounds for termination [7]. The Supreme Court has differentiated between “alcohol odor” and actual drunkenness, requiring objective medical evidence and a proportionality analysis [21].
The interdisciplinary perspective highlights that the strict application of dismissal on the grounds of drunkenness is gradually giving way to a more nuanced approach. While workplace safety and productivity remain legitimate concerns, automatic termination contradicts modern understandings of alcoholism as a disease [1–3,9]. Employers bear both a duty of care towards their employees and a responsibility to ensure safe working conditions [12,15]. In practice, this implies the adoption of occupational health protocols, access to rehabilitation programs, and awareness campaigns that aim to reduce stigma [20,22]. Moreover, proportionality as a guiding principle requires that disciplinary measures be gradual and progressive, reserving dismissal for cases where recurrence or direct endangerment occurs [13,14,16–21].
| Country | Legal Basis | Grounds for Dismissal | Judicial Criteria |
| Argentina | Ley de Contrato de Trabajo N° 20.744 | Drunkenness during work | Divergent: some rulings recognixe disease, others vaidate dismissal |
| Peru | Ley de Productividad y Competitividad Laboral | Repeated drunkenness | Dismissal overturned if disproportionate or without prior sanctions |
| Costa Rica | Código de Trabajo | Showing up intoxicated | Courts prioritize proportionality and require health programs |
| Mexico | Ley Federal del Trabajo, Art. 47 | Drunkenness at work | Supreme Court requires objective proof and proportionality analysis |
| Aspect | Description | Workplace Impact |
| Definition | Chronic progressive disease with dependence, tolerance, withdrawal | Decreased performance, absenteeism |
| Health Consequences | Liver disease, neuropathy, cognitive impairment | Higher accident risk, reduced decision-making capacity |
| WHO/ICD Classification | Recognize as disorder (ICD-10, ICD-11) | Requires diagnosis and rehabilitation, not punishment |
| Principle | Legal Application | Implication |
| Proportionality | Sanction must match severity and recurrence | Protects against disproportionate dismissals |
| Human Dignity | Workers treated as persons, not mere resources | Encourages rehability measures |
| Right to Health | Alcoholism recognized as a disease | Employers should support treatment and reintegration |
| Organization | Recommendation | Implementation in Workplace |
| WHO | Alcoholism as health disorder requiring treatment | Integration of occupational health programs |
| ILO | Address substance abuse as labor-health issue | Policies for prevention, rehabilitation, reintegration |
| OECD | Encourage workplace wellness programs | Reduction of productivity losses and absenteeism |
Published on 10/09/25
Submitted on 03/09/25
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license