Run away, job seekers! - IT Employee Adventist Health Employee Review

1.0
11 Oct 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Are you a Seventh Day Adventist? Do you count on your church connections for employment and advancement? Do you believe that all you need are friends in high places and that knowing how to do your job doesn't matter? Does mind-numbing hypocrisy and a pay rate that is far below the average appeal to you? Then look no farther, you have found where you belong! All others, look elsewhere.

Cons

1. Pay rate is far below the average for IT positions. 2. Leadership positions are heavily biased towards church members. The organization recruits from Adventist academies, promising even high school students leadership positions. It is not unheard of for fresh from-college-with-no-work-experience-church-members (with high-ranking church family members) get Director level jobs immediately at Adventist Health. 3. No cost of living increases for rank and file employees. The only "merit" raise that is given is a yearly 2.5% step increase, maximum. However, check the IRS form 990's for Adventist Health... senior leadership gives themselves massive yearly raises, far above the state and national averages for healthcare senior leadership. 4. Putting AH leadership in a room with our main "partner", Cerner, is like putting guppies in a shark tank (AH are the guppies, Cerner is the shark. Turns out you mostly need to earn leadership at Cerner...there's a concept!). Cerner will continue to get whatever they want and give AH products that they don't need and aren't ready for release. 5. Benefits... what benefits? The medical benefits at this organization will cost you more and provide far less than their competitors. 6. Politics are out of control. This organization is very much a cult of personality. It is who you know, not what you know, that counts at AH for the most part. Many of the long-time employees have come to AH straight from an Adventist academy and never worked anywhere else, so have no idea of what the "real" world is like. I could go on and on, but I think all reading this will get the general drift. Please, if you have any talent and knowledge and other opportunities, do yourself a favor and find employment elsewhere. Maybe once AH realizes they aren't going to get and retain talented individuals unless they value ALL employees (and yes, AH, value also means paying them a competitive wage), things will improve. Only when that happens would I recommend this organization as a place to work for any non-Seventh Day Adventist.

Explore other reviews about Adventist Health

5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Tight knit community working environment, small hospital, great location

Cons

Wages are lower than surrounding cities.

2.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

AP department leaders are great.

Cons

It's difficult to reconcile the message of valuing employees with the decision to eliminate an entire Accounts Payable team and outsource the work overseas. The people affected by this decision weren't just employee numbers on a spreadsheet. They were dedicated individuals who worked hard, supported their communities, and helped keep the organization running every day. If an organization chooses to promote values such as compassion, integrity, and putting people first, those values should be reflected in its actions, especially when making decisions that impact employees' livelihoods. Leadership should be held accountable for ensuring that the organization's practices align with the principles it publicly promotes. Employees, patients, and communities deserve nothing less.

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