Ok to work at - EMT-Basic Houston Methodist Employee Review

3.0
Oct 6, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get great experience working here. Benefits are great. You can learn a lot if you are inexperienced or new to the industry.

Cons

schedule is terrible. pay is terrible. You have a lot of patients and sometimes they are constantly mean making the environment not the best. Same with the nurses some of them are so negative it is not always a great environment.

Explore other reviews about Houston Methodist

5.0
Jul 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay more than other companies around the area

Cons

Very high demanding at times you can feel burnt out.

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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