Duke Health reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(2,316 total reviews)
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David W. Zaas, MD, MBA

Not enough data to show CEO approval

47% positive business outlook

Duke Health has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 2,316 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Duke Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Sep 24, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits for FT salaried employees if you don't get paid on grants. Great opportunities to brown-nose because Duke is so politically-oriented.

Cons

Soft money employees are treated like second-class citizens (or more like contract workers). 30 days notice is all you may get . No internal support exists for you to move laterally or to help you find a job. These changes have come about over the past 6 years por so. So build your network and brown-nose all you can. Very little support for cross-training. Each department must pay for this service and that cost is not liked by the business managers. All hirings are currently frozen at Big Duke. 100 people are about to get their severance offerings. The company picnic was scrapped last year for the first time ever. Don't expect to get by on your merit. You need to be well-liked. I was a FT employee, working my way up the tech ladder for 18 years, finding basically no opportunity to move sideways or up. I got laid off twice within a 2-year period because of mismanagement of funds and lack of the ability for finaqnce to release research money because they were busy shoring up finds for their own staff. That is probably illegal. That doesn't matter at Duke. Fair warning.

1.0
Sep 21, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I relocated from another state after receiving my nursing license because I had heard great things about the opportunities to learn.

Cons

With all hospitals laying off nurses because of the economic downturn, Duke won't hesitate to kick you to the curb during the three month probation period. I learned alot, but one of the things I learned was NOT to make a huge committment to an impersonal organization like Duke. I moved from another state, obtained a NC nursing license, rented my townhouse elsewhere, leased an apartment 5 minutes from Duke, shipped or stored furniture and personal goods -- in short uprooted my life. I was told after just 6 weeks (I had hints at the end of 3 weeks) that hiring new nurses into my unit was an "experiment" and that they really needed nurses "with more mileage". I spite of their knowing how much I had uprooted myselt to accept their employment offer, the best they could do in terms of helping me to find an appropriate position elsewhere within the organization was to "check their web site". It has been a nightmare. I forfited the lease security deposit on my apartment, am living with a friend's parents while looking for a job ANYWHERE in North Carolina. Most hospitals are laying nurses off, so I have applied for over 40 positions and gotten not even a nibble. Not only did it cost me financially and emotionally - but also in terms of finding other openings for new grads. For example, in July there were some nurse residency opportunities in some area hospitals. these programs are now full.

4.0
Jun 30, 2009

Working for Duke University

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Duke University Health System offers good benefits.

Cons

Transferring from department to department can be difficult.

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