Good for learning methods, bad for making good money and buying a house on a single income. - Biostatistician Duke Health Employee Review

3.0
Apr 24, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Learning opportunity, room for growth if a novice, Biostat leadership is very nurturing, Biostat coworkers open to help and train. Benefits are absolutely stellar. You won’t find a better benefits package. But it doesn’t make up for the low pay.

Cons

Low pay, very low pay, short ceiling on promotions, experience means little when it comes to leadership opportunities. the leadership that aren’t the Biostatisticians are way too willing to let the Biostatisticians take the fall for their decisions. Biostatisticians are not treated as experts. The processes for promotions and salary raises were never clear and they lost a lot of great Biostatisticians because of that. Diversity seems like lip service there. Asian students were told not to speak their native language even when just talking to each other and the professor who told them that stepped down just for the business side to hire her husband as a Biostatistician.

Explore other reviews about Duke Health

5.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Scheduling is quite flexible working 3 12s

Cons

Holiday pay is only for major holidays not Christmas Eve

1.0
Jun 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work is meaningful and the team consists of some highly skilled professionals who are dedicated to supporting patients, providers, and the organization. The role provides exposure to complex issues and opportunities for professional growth.

Cons

The department suffers from significant leadership and culture challenges. Employees are hired as experienced professionals but are given little autonomy to perform the work they were hired to do. Leadership frequently inserts itself into routine matters, creating unnecessary delays and fostering a culture of micromanagement rather than trust. Communication is inconsistent and often lacks accountability. Important decisions and changes are frequently communicated verbally without written follow-up, creating confusion and shifting expectations. Employees are expected to remember evolving guidance, identify leadership mistakes, and compensate for communication failures. There is a noticeable gap between leadership messaging and employee experience. Work-life balance, employee engagement, and professional respect are regularly discussed, but many employees do not experience those values in practice. Concerns raised by employees do not appear to result in meaningful change, contributing to low morale and diminished trust in leadership. Leadership often responds to issues by implementing department-wide restrictions rather than addressing the specific individuals or situations involved. As a result, high-performing employees are subjected to increasing oversight and reduced autonomy because leadership is unwilling to address performance concerns directly. Turnover, employee dissatisfaction, and leadership credibility have been ongoing concerns. The department would benefit from leaders who are willing to listen, communicate transparently, accept accountability, and trust the expertise of the professionals they supervise.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All