employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

MetroHealth System

Is this your company?

Warm, welcoming, collegial culture - Center Director MetroHealth System Employee Review

5.0
Oct 8, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

MetroHealth is the kind of place that those who went into healthcare because they really wanted to help others and make a positive difference in the world will be at home. Its charitable mission stretching all the way back to its founding as City Hospital in 1836 with its academic and research mission reaching at least back to 1914 when it became an affiliate of what is now Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, it is a truly remarkable academic teaching hospital and one of Northeast Ohio's relatively unheralded jewels.

Cons

All institutions face challenges, especially those like MetroHealth that aim to deliver the highest quality health care to largely underserved, underinsured, and indigent populations. You have to be willing to try to rise to meet these challenges every day.

Explore other reviews about MetroHealth System

5.0
Jun 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good place to work for

Cons

No cons place is a good place to work

2.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working for a Safety Net hospital system is a great cause! Home-spun management Working with doctors, clinicians, Sr executives, and C-suite is the best part

Cons

EPMO management is weak and ingrown, lacking experience with people, close-minded, and cannot discern second-handed information from fact. EPMO management does not empower their people. EPMO is openly Anti-Agile and non-collaborative, specifically reprimanding collaboration between departments. Leadership is lacking because EPMO manangement cannot get their focus off "self" and on to others. EPMO was a good organization when Sr management had direct oversight of the department. Since then, EPMO management is adolescent in its Capability Maturity Model Integration: Junior manager has less overall management and/or project experience than any single team member or peer, thus creating a non-supportive environment. Weakness: Manager title among VP peers puts EPMO at a disadvantage and weakens their voice in the organization. EPMO is further weakened by lack of promotion and recognition by Sr management/CIO across the organization so project managers must "fight" clients for the right to manage projects, creating an adversarial relationship.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All