Banner University Medical Center Pheonix - Anonymous employee Banner Health Employee Review

2.0
11 Mar 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The benefits are very good when in the Banner network. You earn roughly a day off for every 2 weeks you work when working 40 hours.

Cons

The network is poorly managed at all levels. For one thing they have stated they will not be the highest paying employer but they offer nothing else in exchange, they lack the reputation of Mayo and the benefits are good but fairly industry standard. Some of there practices and policies have been abandoned by other hospitals over 20 years ago but Banner doesn't take the effort to be truly cutting edge. They also have a great deal of trouble recruiting doctors which means you get what you get. It leads to questionable results like when a patient became deaf during routine joint replacement surgery. There are also the process improvement goals where everyone has their own six sigma goal they are graded upon. Instead of bring people together to work on a problem in common the administration says "go out and there and fix something" without any support or guidance. The constant cost cutting is also questionable. They have cut training nurses by more then half which is terrifying when you find out that the most senior nurse on your unit has only a few months experience as a nurse, much less a Banner nurse. They make a classic business mistake of wanting to be most elite provider while also being the low cost leader. You can be the best, you can be the cheapest, but you generally cant pull off both.

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5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Strong Provider Relationships * Direct interaction with provider groups, health systems, FQHCs, specialists, hospitals, and community providers. * Opportunity to become a trusted resource and problem solver. * High visibility with external stakeholders. 2. Broad Organizational Exposure * Works closely with Claims, Contracting, Credentialing, Configuration, Network Management, Quality, Compliance, Finance, and Operations. * Provides a strong understanding of how the entire health plan functions. 3. AHCCCS & Medicare Expertise * Deep exposure to Medicaid (AHCCCS) and Medicare Advantage operations. * Builds expertise in provider reimbursement, claims, credentialing, and regulatory requirements. 4. Strategic Project Opportunities * Provider Relations often identifies operational gaps before other departments. * Opportunities to lead initiatives such as onboarding improvements, provider communications, educational programs, and operational remediation efforts. 5. Community Impact * Ability to directly improve provider experience and member access to care. * Strong connection to community-based healthcare delivery. 6. Leadership Development * Excellent foundation for advancement into: * Government Programs * Provider Operations * Network Management * Strategic Initiatives * Compliance * Population Health * Executive Leadership

Cons

Like many large healthcare organizations, decision-making can sometimes take longer due to the number of stakeholders involved. Cross-functional projects often require coordination across multiple departments, which can impact timelines but also helps ensure compliance and thoughtful implementation.

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Banner Health Response
2w
Thank you for your 8 years of service at Banner Health. We appreciate your feedback. So glad to hear your great experience!
1.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This review isn't about the pros of working for Banner Medical Group.

Cons

The last couple of years with BMG, many current and former leaders have encountered ongoing challenges related to the senior leadership team's (Ops Directors and above) behavior and accountability. Expectations and disciplinary actions are not applied consistently, and when disciplinary actions are applied, it is retaliatory for speaking up about these inconsistencies. This has created a culture of distrust and fear between the clinic leadership teams and Ops Directors/Senior Ops Directors. It also goes against Banner's "If you see something, say something" campaign. The HR team has also contributed to the growing fear and distrust by not following their own guidelines, and by the ERC's showing their bias against leaders through their tone of voice when talking with you, baseless accusations against leadership, and approving corrective actions that are vague and missing specific details of the incident that someone is being written up for. It also raises concerns amongst clinic leaders when multiple leaders bring forward the same concerns and issues about Ops Directors over a lengthy period of time and we're told, "we couldn't corroborate your concerns." And when multiple leaders provide ample evidence (Chronological Management Records, Teams chats, email chains, etc.) to disprove these false accusations and you're still placed into corrective action, the word corruption starts to become applicable.

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Banner Health Response
2d
At Banner Health, we take all feedback very seriously. We would like to know more about what’s behind your review. Please email us at employment @bannerhealth.com. I would like to have someone on the HR team follow up with you.
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