Pros
The QA team is competent and consistent.
Cons
The biggest concern is a significant gap between the culture projected via marketing and the reality of day-to-day experiences for the employees. Leadership invests heavily in presenting an image of support and employee care, but in practice there is minimal clinical oversight, inconsistent accountability, and little structured support for staff. QA’s focus is largely on documentation that passes insurance audits rather than the quality of care delivered or the development of clinical staff. Expectations are rarely set clearly and follow-through is inconsistent. Operational decision-making can feel reactive and at times puzzling, including eliminating roles only to recreate them under different titles, or filling them with individuals whose qualifications don’t align with the responsibilities. For clinical staff bound by a professional ethics code, this creates genuine ethical tension. Advancement seems less tied to clinical excellence and more to a willingness to go along without pushing back. High performers who raise concerns and advocate for quality may find this environment unrewarding.