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Navitus Health Solutions

Engaged employer

Operational and Communication Challenges in a Highly Regulated Environment - Sr Med D Associate Navitus Health Solutions Employee Review

2.0
14 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Navitus offered Good Health Insurance

Cons

Navitus Health Solutions runs as a PBM. . Navitus has grown significantly over the years and continues to expand its footprint in the healthcare and pharmacy benefit space. With that growth has come new opportunities, including the company’s role as a parent organization to other developing and innovative entities within the healthcare ecosystem . When multiple benefit structures and operational models exist within the same infrastructure, it becomes especially important to ensure documentation that follows a defined system; data based . This at every level / “Scope” Navitus Health Solutions originated in Wisconsin and has long-standing ties to the Wisconsin state employee health plan. Because of this history, many long-tenured employees were involved in the early growth of the organization and remain closely connected to the communities the company serves. In practice, it is not uncommon for senior employees to reference their connection to the original community or founding environment. While this may reflect pride in the company’s origins, it can occasionally contribute to a perception that there is an “inner circle” of long-tenured employees who have greater visibility or influence within certain teams. Organizations with a large number of long-tenured employees have the tendency toward maintaining the status quo, even in situations where operational urgency or process improvements may be needed. In my observation, issues that could benefit from more proactive attention sometimes remain unresolved for extended periods. When long-standing operational habits remain unchanged, it can limit the organization’s ability to benefit from the expertise that newer professionals bring. Another challenge that newer employees may experience relates to transitions in responsibilities and communication around operational issues. At times, responsibilities appear to shift from long-tenured employees to newer staff during periods when certain processes or work areas are already under heightened review or scrutiny. Without sufficient historical context or documentation, newer employees can find themselves responsible for tasks where important background information is not readily available. In some situations, it may feel as though key discussions or informal communication about these matters occur outside of normal working interactions, which can leave newer employees without the same level of awareness as those who have been involved with the processes for longer periods of time. Greater transparency, clearer documentation of historical workflows, and more inclusive communication would help ensure that transitions in responsibility are better supported and that employees are not placed in roles without the context needed to succeed. In my experience, raising operational or workplace concerns through HR did not always lead to the type of neutral review or resolution employees might expect. After bringing forward concerns on multiple occasions, I experienced disciplinary scrutiny shortly afterward, which created the impression that raising issues could lead to increased attention on the employee rather than on the underlying concern. Situations like this can discourage open communication and make employees hesitant to escalate operational or workplace matters through formal channels. I have also observed hesitation among employees when it comes to requesting workplace accommodations. In some cases, individuals have expressed concern that providing detailed documentation about their medical needs could lead to questions about their ability to perform their role or maintain their current position. Whether intended or not, this perception can create anxiety around using formal accommodation processes. In a healthcare-related organization where compliance and employee well-being are important, reinforcing trust in HR’s neutrality and ensuring employees feel safe raising concerns or requesting accommodations would likely strengthen both workplace culture and organizational transparency

Explore other reviews about Navitus Health Solutions

5.0
2 Dec 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Navitus has a great culture with mission that is easy to get behind. The teams really come together to solve problems and address issue, and management usually has their hearts in the right place.

Cons

The challenges in the IT space require serious efforts to stay current with industry standards and compliance requirements, and there have been systemic problems.

1
3.0
23 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I see a lot of value in working within Navitus Key Accounts because it provides exposure to complex, high-touch client relationships where the work goes beyond service management. It allows me to strengthen my PBM expertise, understand pharmacy trend and cost drivers more deeply, and partner cross-functionally to bring strategic recommendations to clients. I also value Navitus’ transparent model because it creates a stronger foundation for consultative conversations with clients and consultants.

Cons

Key Accounts can be high-pressure, the workload can be reactive, you may be accountable without always having direct control, transparent PBM does not mean simple PBM, key clients can require a lot of polish and emotional control, internal process changes can create friction

2
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