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Intermountain Health

Engaged employer

Pharmacist - Culture is on a rapid decline; Little respect for frontline staff anymore - Pharmacist Intermountain Health Employee Review

2.0
7 Dec 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- A lot of people list PTO as a pro, but you must realize that includes sick leave - Lots of opportunity to move around laterally or into new areas. - Co-workers: most facilities/areas have amazing pharmacy teams of people that are committed to pt care and the old-school intermountain values.

Cons

- Low Pay: They do market analyses every few years and aim to pay us just lower than the 50th percentile, which is already lame. However since Intermountain is king in Utah they essentially set what that mean is. So they are basically able to keep pay low and artificially deflate the average that they aim to match. If you go to one of the other healthcare systems in Utah you will get a significant amount more per hour. Also they used to tout that the benefits made up for the pay, but i don’t think employees feel that is true anymore. - Declining culture of intermountain at large: You probably get the picture from all the other reviews. Yes, we got a new CEO about a year ago and ever since it seems like there is less of a close-knit community feel to our hospitals and work environment. Less respect and gratitude for front-line staff, less listening to employees, more micro-management, and more budget cuts that affect FTEs involved in direct patient care - which is a huge safety concern. - Declining culture within Pharmacy: There has been huge trickle down in the Declining culture and morale from CEO Marc Harrison to the Pharmacy departments. It feels like this started before he came, but the more rapid rate of decline has been felt by everyone since his arrival. It’s total mixed signals when management talks about championing advancing Pharmacy roles and commitment to medication and patient safety, yet the actions being taken are in direct opposition to these goals. - “Benchmarking”. Ugh. What a disgusting buzz word that is right now. In keeping with the mixed signals mentioned above, Pharmacy upper management wants us to be first in class, yet they “benchmark” our FTEs to hospitals in other states that don’t provide the same services or level of care that intermountain Pharmacy has been doing. And then FTEs get cut because we are benchmarked against these lower-level hospitals? If you want world class care, it’s going to take a World class budget and staffing. - Everything is being micro-managed from a corporate level in ways that don’t make sense. Some standardization is good and has made huge improvements; however everything is being needled and nit-picked from high rise towers and upper management is seeming more and more out of touch. Why have Pharmacy directors if you are going to micro manage daily operations, staffing, FTEs, budgets, inventory operations, etc etc? There is some great talent in lower level management at some sites but their ability to run things or make decisions seems almost non-existent now. - Declining employee appreciation: The presence of being asked to do more with less has reached extreme levels. Some sites have pharmacy teams that band together and buoy each other up, but Some sites have cut-throat, toxic cultures of throwing coworkers under the bus. We are highly motivated, highly educated healthcare professionals and yet feel like we are being treated without respect or appreciation. The pharmacy department is losing great talent left and right. Recent implementation of standardized work schedules across the system that make no sense have really thrown people over the edge. Local hospitals have FTEs and budgets - Let them figure out the scheduling that makes most sense for their site within these parameters. Also when you implement huge changes that grossly affect the details of people’s lives you should be sensitive to that fact and recognize the human factor in what you’re doing. You can be transparent about the why and let people know you appreciate that you are turning their personal lives upside down with ridiculously short notice. - It feels crazy to have gone into a profession where you are highly educated, residency trained, committed to the intermountain values and feel so demeaned, belittled, and unappreciated from upper management. Is this what we spent a decade of education and training for?

Explore other reviews about Intermountain Health

5.0
5 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Team oriented, strong pay for Denver, mostly respected by physicians

Cons

Many more meetings as a PA than i’ve ever had

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Intermountain Health Response
1mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience. We are happy to hear about your time at Intermountain Health and that you enjoy our collaborative, team-focused work culture, our supportive leadership, and our total rewards package. We appreciate your review and will share it with our teams as we continue to move forward.
2.0
11 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The best benefits by far— comprehensive and easy to navigate and understand.

Cons

Policies and procedures have become detached, less human and much more “bottom line” than in previous years. My disability requests were denied and I haven’t been able to move up or even laterally to accommodate myself in this organization despite having my Bachelors and recent work samples due to the automation of hiring and how removed HR seems from managements goal to promote from within. They’re missing a lot of talent in front of them.

1
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Intermountain Health Response
3d
Thank you for sharing your feedback, both positive and constructive. At Intermountain Health, we believe that a culture of well-being for all caregivers is foundational to our ability to deliver on our mission of helping people live the healthiest lives possible. Caregivers are at the heart of what we do, which is why we have invested in and implemented several programs and resources to help caregivers enhance their physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, and financial health. It’s important that every caregiver feels secure, supported, and safe, both at home and at work. Additionally, data plays a big role in how we care for patients—and it also guides how we support our caregivers. That’s why our benefits are thoughtfully designed to balance affordability, sustainability, and competitiveness, while creating a consistent experience for everyone on our team. We’re always listening, and as caregiver needs and market trends evolve, so will our benefits.
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