No longer leading Medicine - Staff Nurse (RN) Houston Methodist Employee Review

4.0
Jan 25, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The care given is patient centered. Before covid they had an annual company party for all the nurses during nurses week. Pay is competitive.

Cons

Covid has been very challenging. Nurses are burnt out and administration is focused on cost cutting measures. Nurses aren't being paid hazard pay and travel nurses make triple our pay to do the same job. There is not much of an incentive to stay.

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Houston Methodist Response
5y
Our employees are true heroes and we are very proud of the many things we have done to support, recognize, and reward them during these challenging times.

Explore other reviews about Houston Methodist

5.0
Jul 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, great work hours, supportive team members, great shift times

Cons

If you’re good in a particular area they will stick you there ALL the time, especially if others aren’t good at the role

1.0
Jul 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The transition to Workday is a welcome modernization that brings the organization more in line with other large health systems.

Cons

the work-life balance for Advanced Practice Providers (APPs) needs significant improvement. The criteria for earning administrative time place unrealistic expectations on APPs, making it difficult to achieve a sustainable workload. It is especially discouraging to work alongside physicians who have more attainable criteria for protected administrative time, creating a sense of inequity that negatively impacts morale. Additionally, there is little flexibility in scheduling. Offering 0.8 or 0.6 FTE positions would help retain experienced APPs who want to continue providing high-quality patient care while maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Without these options, many APPs are left choosing between full-time burnout and leaving the organization altogether. the work-life balance for Advanced Practice Providers (APPs) needs significant improvement. The criteria for earning administrative time place unrealistic expectations on APPs, making it difficult to achieve a sustainable workload. It is especially discouraging to work alongside physicians who have more attainable criteria for protected administrative time, creating a sense of inequity that negatively impacts morale. Additionally, there is little flexibility in scheduling. Offering 0.8 or 0.6 FTE positions would help retain experienced APPs who want to continue providing high-quality patient care while maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Without these options, many APPs are left choosing between full-time burnout and leaving the organization altogether.

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