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MetroHealth System

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Metrohealth Respects Medics - Paramedic MetroHealth System Employee Review

4.0
12 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1) Utilized to the furthest extent of my scope of Practice (within a clinical environment). 2) Profession of Paramedic is respected as a unique functionality instead of just a support role for Nurses. 3) Excellent Benefits/compensation (beyond pay-rate). 4) Ability to pickup shifts at all locations (but not with the Critical Care Transport division).

Cons

1) Salary is competitive, but still paid less than Firefighter/Paramedics. 2) Often forced to sit with behavioral health Patients due to understaffing.

Explore other reviews about MetroHealth System

5.0
23 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Feels like work a family.

Cons

Higher up tend to implement ideas without asking the people doing to work...

2.0
3 June 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.

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