Fast paced, rewarding, though full of distracted management. - Director bei Providence: Mitarbeiterbewertung

3.0
10. Juli 2008
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Pros

Patient safety is core to everything you do at Providence. This aspect of working with them is highly motivational. Providence is a religious organization with a long history (over 100 years) of providing services from a catholic perspective so don't expect family planning services any time soon. That being said, the hospitals are well run and the new focus on elder care is a perfectly timed entry into an undeserved market with tight margins (clients with fixed incomes). Away from the line of business (nearer the corporate offices in Renton) is where the political infighting frequently gets out of control. As long as you are a professional healthcare provider and avoid the management chain, you will find this to be a rewarding place to work.

Kontras

The management team is confrontational and distracted by infighting.

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5.0
19. Apr. 2026
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Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Great people to work with, remote, supportive

Kontras

Use desktop equipment instead of laptop so stuck sitting wherever it’s set up at.

1.0
5. Juni 2026
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Strong mission-driven work with many compassionate employees who genuinely care about patients. Providence also offers useful commuter benefits through TriMet and a solid HSA option compared to many employers in similar roles.

Kontras

In my experience across multiple Providence clinics, the culture consistently prioritized speed and productivity over training, understanding, and employee support. Questions were not treated as part of the learning process. They were often treated as evidence of incompetence, which created environments where employees became afraid to ask for clarification. Onboarding and workflow training were extremely inconsistent. Much of the “training” consisted of shadowing already overwhelmed employees while trying to absorb complex workflows in real time. Important mistakes were sometimes corrected behind the scenes instead of being addressed immediately, leading to situations where employees were later criticized for patterns they did not fully understand were happening. When I requested clearer written workflows because that is how I learn best, the response felt defensive rather than collaborative. Communication often felt centered around frustration that training took time instead of recognition that proper onboarding is necessary in healthcare operations. Over time, this created a culture where anxiety increased, confidence decreased, and employees felt pressured to appear self-sufficient instead of properly supported. Burnout was constant and visible across nearly every employee I worked with. Many staff members seemed emotionally exhausted and unsupported while still being expected to maintain extremely high productivity standards. Providence also advertises PTO in a way that sounds more generous than it functionally is. Employees are required to use PTO for mandatory holiday closures, significantly reducing the actual flexibility of that time off. Attendance policies were rigid and heavily disciplinary in practice, with little room for nuance or real-life circumstances. In my experience, context and communication often mattered less than metrics. I also found HR interactions to feel more punitive than collaborative. During attendance discussions, I came prepared with extensive documentation and prior communications showing that several situations had previously been understood as approved or excused. I was told that information had not been received prior to the meeting and had to explain everything verbally in real time instead. The experience felt less like a conversation intended to resolve misunderstandings and more like a process moving toward a predetermined conclusion. Overall, Providence employs many good people, but the operational culture I experienced frequently prioritized optics, speed, and performance metrics over sustainable training, employee development, psychological safety, and long-term retention.

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