ZoomCare reviews

2.8

34% would recommend to a friend

(381 total reviews)
avatar

Jeff Fee

37% approve of CEO

24% positive business outlook

ZoomCare has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 381 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The ZoomCare employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

381 reviews
5.0
Dec 16, 2017

PA

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great starting Pay, good leadership team

Cons

downsides to working at zoomcare

2.0
Dec 14, 2017

Dysfunction Abounds

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The schedule is great. You get 3.5 days a week off. More tenured providers who are grandfathered from the old system make decent pay (though not NDs, who summarily had their pay cut by 25% with less than a month's warning). You'll rarely see your manager.

Cons

The company is entirely profit-driven at the expense of good care. The only goal of management is to show a profit and attract investors. They hire a great team of MDs to support mid-level providers and advise management, then make sweeping changes to how we provide care without consulting (and sometimes without informing) them. As a provider you will be expected to see patients in 15 minutes regardless of their chief complaint and with few scheduled breaks. Your schedule will be supported by a remote team call center employees with no clinical experience who your assistant must instant message when you are behind in order to ask for a break in your schedule. They'll need to make a good case for you getting the break. If lawyering isn't their strength you may be out of luck. If the call center employees deem your situation desperate enough, your request will be granted. Your assistant may be great but s/he won't start this way because they receive very little training and have no clinical experience. You'll have one member of this team of underpaid (mostly) college graduates to provide all of your onsite support. They are responsible not just for assisting you but phlebotomy, insurance, inventory, and customer service. Not surprisingly assisting the provider often takes a back seat. You do your own vitals and often have to clean up your own exam room after procedures. Turnover is high. If you're lucky enough to have a good assistant for a year, you'll spend the first 2-3 months struggling as they learn on the job and the last month or two struggling as their animosity toward the company calcifies and they lose interest in their job. Work at a slow clinic? That sounds like less stress, right? You can spend more time with your patients and connect with people and remember why you got into medicine in the first place. NOPE. Management will hassle you about your visit duration, a metric they follow. You also may be asked to fill in at a busier clinic some days but won't be compensated as a float for your flexibility. Nonetheless, management will hassle you about building up your patient base, which is hard to do when your clinic has irregular hours. The system also doesn't support scheduling follow-ups beyond a few days. If you want to see a patient back after a month on his new asthma meds, you'll have to set up a reminder to email him. This is a theme, building up a practice is expected but you aren't given support in doing so. The middle managers who directly supervise you come mostly from retail. When they are schmoozing you over on the latest change to how you deliver your care you just know you're getting a variation of the pep talk some Victoria's Secret Assistant manager got when the new Angels collection came out in 2010. They have little respect for healthcare providers. I once heard one of them refer to a group of providers as "you girls." You might be asked to give feedback. Don't fall into this trap. For the most part this is a futile effort but those who are outspoken attract attention of middle management and not in a good way. If you choose to go down this road, extra attention will be paid to your metrics (timeliness, visit duration, revenue per visit, etc) and you will be singled out for having a bad attitude. You won't be given inside information on upcoming changes to the organization and compensation that might influence your clinic assignment requests. Upper management may be sincere in soliciting feedback but middle managers generally try to steer the conversation back to whatever they are there to sell you. Luckily, as noted above, they rarely have time to meet you since they manage so many providers and assistants.

3.0
Oct 31, 2017

Time well spent.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

(Employee at Headquarters) AKA Basecamp: In all reality no matter what anyone says, especially on Glassdoor as I had the pleasure of reading plenty of hateful reviews, I enjoyed my time at ZOOM+Care. (Even being laid off) At any job in life, there is always something to work on. That being personal growth and also how you can help the company grow and make it what you want it to be. You can't change everything and there is never the 100% perfect place to work. The Pros of ZOOM+Care was the opportunity to work with lots of different departments from the Design Side of things. Of course, as far as design goes it can feel like you're living in your own world but it was a great challenge to try and build relationships with other departments to see how you can help them grow and how your work has an impact on everything. It's easy to lose sight of your ultimate goal in a fast-paced demanding environment. If you can overcome the struggles and work together and really get down to the mission of what ZOOM+Care is trying to do, then you will see the magic. It takes time to build a culture and an environment with a company that is always fighting the big dogs in the healthcare world. Not everything is catered to you with free meals and lunches or Fancy offices. You have to work hard and it's not easy. The process and the valuable people you meet at this company internally is worth every minute you spend at headquarters and in the field. As cliche as it always sounds. "It's not for everyone" But that's the truth. If you want the opportunity to be apart of a company that is fighting the industry and you want to make a difference someday even if you are there a month, I know you will take something away that will help you in your future endeavors.

Cons

When times are tough the culture is almost unbearable. Everyone finds a hole, makes an assumption, spreads a rumor and creates panic. The problem is the amount of information that is behind locked up from employees as far as the health of the company. It would do everyone a favor if there was more transparency because it wouldn't cause as much stress and the constant sense of the unknown. (Could be a lot different now. Lawsuits and finances are never an easy subject with employees) But I think you would find that if everyone had a sense of what was going on, you would almost want to come together and rally to make a difference. There will always be the employees that are always out to find some dirt and spread it. Can't blame them, it's just who they are and probably don't enjoy their job.

Viewing 274 - 276 of 381 Reviews

Glassdoor has 392 ZoomCare reviews submitted anonymously by ZoomCare employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ZoomCare is right for you.