Blind Leadership - RN, Bsn Select Medical Employee Review

1.0
10 Mar 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The insurance is OK and I find the coverage to be equal to or better than some of the local hospitals. Pay is decent overall.

Cons

Blind leadership from the CEO has led to turnover so high that in a year you wont know over half of the staff. Many positions are filled by incompetent people and as long as there is a warm body present, the blind leadership is satisfied. Documentation errors, falsification of records, nothing gets the attention of the CEO as long as patients can be admitted. The best part is, real proof does NOT change a thing! Blind leadership rules this location and organization. Admit patients, don't ask questions, don't challenge anyone, and don't demand people actually do their jobs; this is what Select wants and our blind leadership appreciate. Stay away as a patient or family. There are much better facilities that care about quality in our city.

Explore other reviews about Select Medical

5.0
28 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great onboarding Good systems in place Resources for pretty much everything

Cons

Rigid point system for attendance

2.0
4 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pay is better than most places- but for a reason. Rehab team fabulous.

Cons

Greedy for-profit system. Benefits are terrible. Unsafe patient assignments. This patient population is critically ill, unstable, and often come with infections, pressure injuries and other conditions they acquired at the sending hospital. Most packed ICUs send patients here when they aren’t progressing fast enough or about to die. You often have 5 of these patients at a time on ventilators, critical drips, complex wound treatments, etc. Due to high staff turnover you are often working with a staff who was rushed through orientation and hired with no acute care experience. Their clinical liaisons often withhold or fail to assess for pertinent information prior to them arriving and they often make promises to the families and patients that are untrue (they get paid bonuses to bring in patients- regardless of their outcomes). If you become a charge nurse expect to have a full patient assignment while rounding with providers, running codes, and doing admissions. Don’t expect support from your local leadership team as their expectations from the regional team are too high and they are also overburdened with responsibilities.

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