The Only Review You Need - Therapist KVC Health Systems Employee Review

2.0
Oct 6, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It really could be a great place to work.

Cons

These positions are promoted as "flexible," and while there is some flexibility in theory, the reality is very different. You are constantly working around other people’s schedules—clients, coworkers, DCBS workers—which makes your own schedule unpredictable and chaotic. Meetings that could easily be handled via email take up large chunks of time especially when considering travel time, and you're expected to remain available for last-minute changes, cancellations, and no-shows, all while meeting strict deadlines. You’re also expected to drive long distances across multiple counties or regions with minimal notice and little control over your daily schedule. It’s not uncommon to be sent two hours south in the morning, drive two hours north because that was the client's only availability and back south before going back up north to go home all in the same day. These changes often happen with little advance warning, sometimes the same day or day before, which makes planning anything outside of work nearly impossible. The travel expectations, combined with high caseloads and poor scheduling systems, contribute significantly to burnout. The documentation requirements are excessive, repetitive, and often feel redundant. To make matters worse, the records system is unreliable and frequently down, adding unnecessary stress and time to an already overloaded workload. I am convinced the charting system was created and is being managed by a group of high schoolers in their tech class. Even though the organization encourages taking PTO as a form of self-care, it often feels pointless in practice. You have to do a significant amount of prep work just to take time off — including getting coverage, finishing documentation ahead of time, and coordinating cases — and when you return, you're buried in catch-up tasks with even tighter deadlines. Instead of feeling rested, taking PTO often leaves you more stressed than if you had just worked through it. While you're in the field trying to juggle all of this, leadership is rarely present. Supervisors work remotely, maintain firm personal boundaries (like picking up their kids or attending personal appointments), yet expect FCC's and clinicians to have virtually none. The double standard is stark and frustrating. They tell everyone how important it is to have boundaries until they need you to do something. Your evenings will be gone. Upper management appears to be completely disconnected from what frontline staff are experiencing. While some leaders may have once worked in clinical or case management roles, those experiences were clearly years ago — and the job has changed drastically since then. The expectations are higher, the documentation is far more demanding, the caseloads are heavier, and the clients’ needs are far more complex (which they remind us of often). Despite this, leadership continues to operate as if nothing has changed. Decisions are made without understanding the real-world impact on those of us doing the actual work. There’s very little field presence, no meaningful feedback loop, and little effort to truly understand what support is needed. Caseloads continue to grow until you're completely maxed out, with little regard for burnout or work-life balance. Retention is clearly a problem, and unfortunately, it doesn’t seem to be a priority for leadership. The support feels minimal, and often, it’s hard not to feel like just a body filling a role so others don’t have to. If you have children or a family, be aware: this job will demand so much of your time and energy that you’ll rarely see them. Maintaining work-life balance here is extremely difficult, especially for parents. The organization constantly emphasizes the importance of mental health and family stability — for clients. But ironically, the same values are not extended to their own staff. Many employees are struggling with their own mental health and family responsibilities as a direct result of the job's demands, yet there is little meaningful support, flexibility, or understanding provided. It feels hypocritical to promote work-life balance and self-care externally, while internally pushing staff to their limits. Ultimately, while the work itself—helping others—is meaningful, it comes at the cost of your own wellbeing and family time. Unless major changes are made in management, workload distribution, and support systems, this will continue to be a high-turnover, high-stress environment.

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KVC Health Systems Response
8mo
Thank you for sharing these details. Your feedback is very important to us! Our flexibility and work-life balance model is a core part of our culture. We know that can look different for various roles at KVC. We work hard to provide support, training, and resources to management so they can achieve that model for their teams. It's disappointing to hear that hasn't been your experience. We encourage you to talk with your manager and to share your opinions during the Q12 survey. We hear you, and we will pass your comments along to leadership for review and further discussion.

Explore other reviews about KVC Health Systems

5.0
May 21, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

KVC has been a rewarding place to work. I have a supportive supervisor, great coworkers, and genuinely enjoy the work I do. The team environment makes a big difference, especially in a setting that can be challenging at times.

Cons

This position definitely requires a strong, adaptable nurse due to the behavioral and psychiatric needs of the patients we care for, but it is meaningful work and has helped me grow both personally and professionally.

5.0
May 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture has transformed dramatically from toxic to accountable, clear, and kind over a decade Strong leadership development (Gallup, Dare to Lead frameworks) Weekly 1:1 supervision means employees know their supervisors well Real internal mobility entry level to director is achievable based on work ethic Mission-driven workforce, people genuinely care about the kids and families they serve High retention most people want to stay and grow within, even when their current role isn't ideal, they will move positions to stay Respectful, psychologically safe environment all opinions welcome Excellent medical/dental/vision benefits; decent 403b match Positive social environment with systems that naturally filter out toxic behavior over time Competitive pay within the nonprofit/mental health sector

Cons

Pay is significantly below for-profit market rates. nonprofit pay scale is a real tradeoff Director role is highly unstructured can feel chaotic, especially in 24/7 locations requiring after-hours work Toxic employees can linger too long the kindness and grace extended to everyone delays removal Some employees stay in roles that aren't a good long-term fit simply because they love the culture Heavy meeting load at director level can crowd out focused, strategic work

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