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AIDS Healthcare Foundation

Engaged Employer

BEWARE: Shady and Office Politic - Program Manager AIDS Healthcare Foundation Employee Review

1.0
Oct 9, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

working for a good cause, the mission is ok

Cons

I was amazed by AHF's core values: Patient-Centered, Values Employees, Respect for Diversity, Nimbleness, and Fight for What's Right. However, after working in this organization for more than 3 years. I'm laughing so hard on those core values. TOTALLY JOKE! An incompetent team member, and never gonna respect diversity. Office politics is a huge problem, sadly no one wanted to speak up. This organization is a joke, people come and go, not surprised most of us scared of losing our job every day. No social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic. The higher-level management keeps pushing you to come to the office no matter what! No room for growth Low salary and you will never get a salary rise No work-life balance

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AIDS Healthcare Foundation Response
5y
Thanks for sharing your experience, do you mind telling me more, I can be reached at clarisce.tolston@aidshealth.org

Explore other reviews about AIDS Healthcare Foundation

5.0
Jun 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Collaborate with multidisciplinary team to provide the best care for our patients. Non-profit, great for PSLF. Competitive benefits and PTO.

Cons

Lower salary compared to market.

2.0
Jun 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A real sense that you’re doing something meaningful.

Cons

While the mission of the organization is admirable, the internal culture often undermined the work being done for vulnerable populations. Leadership turnover was constant, with management structures frequently changing and new supervisors appearing every few months. There were often multiple layers of management with unclear roles, creating confusion, competing priorities, and a workplace environment that felt more focused on internal politics than supporting staff. Many employees were deeply committed to the mission and routinely gave far more of themselves than was sustainable. I know I did. The workload and culture made it easy to lose any sense of work-life balance, and there was little meaningful support for the emotional toll of the work. What was most disheartening was watching an organization built to care for vulnerable people become, at times, one of the most difficult places for its own employees to feel valued and supported. The disconnect between the mission and the treatment of staff was significant. Several years later, I still recognize the impact that experience had on my professional confidence and overall well-being.

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