Kaiser Permanente reviews

3.8

69% would recommend to a friend

(14,801 total reviews)
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Gregory Adams

53% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Kaiser Permanente has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 14,801 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Kaiser Permanente employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

15K reviews
2.0
Jul 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are many opportunities to improve the health care delivery system at Kaiser. The organization - and this refers to the "corporate" functions - is well aligned around the importance of delivery of care, and improved health outcomes, to all patients. It can be really great to feel part of such an important mission, and to see the potential for a working model of health care delivery that is better aligned in its incentives than most of the industry in the U.S. Retirement benefits are excellent, if one stays for at least 5 years. (Kaiser still has a defined benefit plan, in addition to a 403(b).) At some point (maybe at 10 years?), a retiree gets health care coverage for life!

Cons

Most of the "corporate" executives have learned that they need to self-promote and protect their own interests in this highly-political environment. When moving beyond areas that directly affect the delivery of care, the politics of self-interest and turf seem to take over. It can be extremely difficult to get the right things done for Kaiser Permanente as a whole, because one must balance the frequently competing interests of the individual executives. Because of the longevity of Kaiser (over 50 years) and the traditions behind that, as well as the political climate, change is difficult to make happen - even when there are really compelling reasons for it.

4.0
May 1, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When taken benefits into account, Kaiser Permanente is probably one of the top three healthcare providers to work for in California. I was comfortably making around $140,000 a year when I left. My job was exempt and I did have weekends off

Cons

Exempt jobs at Kaiser Permanente pay well. But you are always going to work well over 40 hours a week. It has become the culture there. If you need time off because of a dental appointment or doctors appointment your manager can make life very difficult by asking for a note . They will even ask you to work after your appointment. Over the past decade management has had fewer leaders with clinical experience which has had an affect on morale and work life balance. Current upper management is the MBA type in which the only thing that matters is the bottom line. Workers morale and workers rights are not even a consideration anymore. Which is very unfortunate because For a brief time in the early 2000s Kaiser Permanente could have taken a different tack and truly been the leader in quality healthcare and led the way in treating their employees well. But leadership Chose the easy pass of “well all the other companies are cutting back why can’t we“? And that mantra of bringing Kaiser back to the pack persists today. The old timers who have at least a decade in aren’t gonna leave because the retirement benefits are good. But folks with less than a decade would probably follow my lead and find a much more rewarding less stressful workplace for just a little bit less pay.

1.0
Aug 20, 2018

I wish I had known...

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Supposedly the pension plan is why people stay even if they don't like Kaiser.

Cons

I wish this list was short because I originally had high expectations based on the few people who had good experiences and recommended working there. 1. I was disappointed with the organization from day one. Everyone wanted to ensure you were brainwashed at the new employee orientation by repeatedly telling you how "lucky" you were to make it there because Kaiser is such a prestigious place to work. The orientation was completely disorganized with those who were supposed to give the presentations not showing up. The physical structures are very old and worn down, and you can instantly pick up that there is drama at a lot of levels within the organization. 2. Each region is very disconnected from the others, with their own rules and policies. I worked for the Diablo area in the Northern California region, and my perception from my interactions is that the Northwest region is much better (but no experience working there). 3. No local support for IT or HR, you call a call center and can waste hours waiting, valuable time that Kaiser is paying for, but doesn't care to provide efficient support. 4. Benefits are really not as great as everyone makes them out to be. I had much better benefits where I came from! PTO is accrued on a monthly anniversary date basis, so as a new employee, you're out of luck. No 401K match or contribution for new employees, only real benefits are to those who survive 5+ years and stay for the pension plans. 5. You are not valued as an individual, you are only known by who you report to and what your title is and who you brown-nose. Literally, people are talked about by discussing who they report to and who they report to, and many workarounds are taken to convey any piece of information. 6. Honest opinions are not asked for nor wanted in any manner, just keep your mouth shut and do what you're told. 7. The disorganization is present at the level of how the organization is even split into 3 companies with the foundation, physicians group, and the hospitals being separated. This causes for a lot of drama and political headaches between the 3 and no one can really focus on trying to do their job to provide good patient care. 8. As a new employee, no real structure or resources are provided. I brought my own computer to work to be able to watch training videos for my first 4 weeks on the job. They didn't even have a loaner or extra computer available for me to use. I didn't know what the deadline was in order to sign up for benefits, didn't have an email account for over a month. But they were quick to assign me a cell phone to send lengthy text messages. Didn't we move away from the culture of always being on your cell phones during meetings and being present and contributing? Why waste everyone else's time if you're too important to listen and just want to send texts to communicate? Incompetent managers and the culture they pass on and expect of employees is disgusting. When I asked for clarifications regarding inconsistent information my supervisor kept giving me, she told me I was challenging expectations. Promotions happen by brown-nosing, not skills. Clearly, this supervisor needed a lot of work to develop her leadership shills. I was constantly taken advantage of as I did not have a family or children to tend to, being asked to work random hours at the drop of a hat. How would someone who had childcare be able to change schedules like that? I was also exploited to date another employee of Kaiser (by my direct supervisor) and when I declined, the attitude shifted. I kept being asked questions about my personal life and when I wouldn't share, they would inquire with a coworker. Don't fall for the gimmicks, do your research and if you think you can keep your head down and just do your job in spite of all of the drama around you and behind you, go for it. But trust me, there are much better companies to work for out there. Save yourself the headache and toxicity, find a better place to work.

Viewing 43 - 45 of 14,801 Reviews

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