Poor staffing and management undermine patient care - Registered Nurse HCA Healthcare Employee Review

2.0
Apr 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

health care staff is about it

Cons

pulling nursing assistants to sit with pts at risk for falling and suicidal ideations while robbing other patients who are alert and oriented or dont desire to hurt themselves or others of adequate care. calling off staff,who could fulfill the role of a pct/cna, whether core staff or a travel rn, to adequately staff a unit, ensuring patient, but more importantly nurse safety. adequately staff a unit, ensuring better care by assisting the nurse, who truly is the primary caregiver for the patient. In addition, unit managers/directors unwilling to work with nurses or nursing assistants, whether travel or core staff, in self scheduling. Also, unit managers/directors who show up at 6am for huddle, to discuss personal issues among staff, criticize staff for inadequacies, encourage staff to get to know something personal about a patient, yet, fall short of getting to know something personal about their own staff, SCREAMS, "we're just here to look good". When your employees realize you don't care about them or the patient's, your staff will eventually follow suit. period.

Explore other reviews about HCA Healthcare

5.0
Mar 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great opportunity for growth and networking.

Cons

I do not have any cons to share

1.0
May 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Engagement across ITG is low. A significant portion of the workforce is coasting toward retirement, which creates a stagnant environment with little drive or initiative. Compensation is adequate but not compelling enough to offset the cultural inertia

Cons

Stability is an illusion here. Compensation and benefits are underwhelming. PTO starts at 14 days/year and stays there for your first five years. Benefits are below industry standard. No bonus structure to speak of. The deeper issue is structural. In May 2026, HCA posted $1.6 billion in net profit over a single quarter — and responded by laying off hundreds of employees because it was buthurt that Trump stopped the Covid subsidies Let that sink in: a billion-dollar quarter net profit triggered headcount reductions to reduce the payroll, Hundreds of good people lost their jobs overnight in 1 department. Individual performance is irrelevant. It does not matter how much you contribute or how consistently you deliver. A single cost-cutting decision at the C-suite level can eliminate your position overnight. There is no meritocracy here, just exposure to executive whim. If you are looking for career stability or a workplace that values retention, look elsewhere. The culture reflects the incentives — most employees have learned not to invest emotionally in the work, and you can't blame them. When leadership treats headcount as the first lever to pull every time earnings dip, people stop caring and start surviving.

4
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