Stressful, long hours - Human Resources Akron Children's Employee Review

1.0
Mar 28, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Coworkers are great and working from home is nice.

Cons

Low morale. Stressful work. If your exempt, be prepared to work 12+ hours a day. Micromanaged, controlling what you do. So many administrative tasks you cant get your required work done. This job causes nothing but stress and anxiety. For being a hospital, benefits are awful. Pay is low

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Akron Children's Response
1y
Thank you for sharing your feedback. We are always looking for ways to improve efficiency and would welcome your thoughts. We encourage you to connect with your team and share ideas on how to address and improve workflow concerns. Please know we regularly review our compensation in comparison to the market. We have made numerous adjustments to ensure we remain competitive – not only for recruitment purposes but also to support our current employees. We also benchmark and refresh our benefits package annually to ensure we’re offering competitive, cost-effective benefits that meet the needs of our diverse workforce. When it comes to health plans, our consumer-directed health plan is a market leader, as we provide up to $2,400 annually (depending on your coverage level) into the Health Savings Accounts of employees.

Explore other reviews about Akron Children's

5.0
Apr 11, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great management, good pay, great coworkers

Cons

None that I can think of!

2.0
Feb 27, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Providers and clinical staff genuinely care for the children coming in and out of the hospital. My review has nothing to do with the actual patient care that is given here.

Cons

If you’re considering a job within ISD, save yourself the trouble and look elsewhere. This isn’t coming from a bitter ex-employee — I genuinely enjoyed much of my time here. This is a warning from someone who watched this department deteriorate over the last 5-6 years. Leadership is filled with yes men and women who have zero interest in protecting the people who actually do the work. Escalating an issue or concern amounts to nothing. Project timelines are set by people who have no idea what’s realistic, and the CIO is so far removed from day-to-day operations that expectations are incredibly high when there aren’t enough resources to get the job done. There is no career growth here — they won’t pay competitive salaries to attract qualified new talent, and they won’t promote the experienced people they already have. Internal hires are continuously blocked which makes it impossible for anyone to grow. Instead, they’ve resorted to outsourcing ISD positions because it’s cheaper than valuing their workforce. But don’t worry — there’s always a fresh email announcing another manager or director climbing the ladder. Senior leadership continues to take care of themselves just fine. The people on the ground? Not so much.

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