Mentally & Physically Draining - Enteral Coordinator Option Care Health Employee Review

1.0
Aug 1, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary is decent considering it is a call center.

Cons

Management treats you like a machine cranking out numbers. Training is lacking in many areas but you are just expected to know everything. You are expected to work beyond your full capacity and are reprimanded for every small mistake. You don't get full access to different softwares and portals but expected to use them anyway or you get in trouble.They love to micromanage but don't give you the time of day for the important things. Managers spend more time going around to every employee to check their footware than actually doing their jobs. Their favorite hobby is to fire people even when they are extremely short on staffed. The pressure, stress and poor treatment from manager makes working there miserable. I would not recommend this place to anyone. Also, if you are hired temp to hire they will not honor the temp period contract and will make you wait a year (no PTO or holiday pay) before they actually hire you instead of the four months that is supposed to be.

Explore other reviews about Option Care Health

5.0
Jan 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Come a long way and workload is great and feel like you got the tools to advance

Cons

No overtime at this moment

2.0
Mar 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work is meaningful, and many frontline employees are dedicated, hardworking, and committed to patient care.

Cons

My experience with Option Care Health was defined by poor leadership, lack of accountability, and an unsustainable workload. Work volume increased significantly over a relatively short period of time, while staffing levels did not keep pace. Employees were expected to absorb the additional workload without the resources needed to do so, creating a high-pressure environment that was not sustainable. Leadership lacked visibility and engagement with frontline teams. There was little effort to understand day-to-day challenges, and communication was often inconsistent or absent. This disconnect made it difficult for employees to feel supported. As operational demands grew, responsibility was frequently shifted away from leadership and onto external factors or frontline staff. Employees were made to feel as though they were not doing enough, despite consistently working at or beyond capacity. Additionally, dismissive comments from leadership suggesting that performance issues were due to employees not wanting to work contributed to low morale and did not reflect the reality of a team that was working extremely hard under increasing pressure. Overall, the culture did not prioritize employee support or accountability, leading to burnout and frustration.

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