Rude and unprofessional - Care Coordinator Monogram Health Employee Review

1.0
Jul 11, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The phone staff was nice and helpful

Cons

I was hire by an agency and they really did not have the right information about the job. It was supposed to be customer service but it was more like sales. i was calling he same people 2 0r 3 times to get them to continue the service. The training was supposed to be 1 week it was only 2 1/2 days. The trainer was rude every time somebody would ask a question she would make a face and snap at them by the end of the week 2 people quit and by the end of the month there were only 2 people left. The trainer went back to Nashville after the first week. The nurses I was supposed to schedule for appointments were always quitting too.

Explore other reviews about Monogram Health

5.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great support from all levels of leadership. Very competitive pay, bonus structure and benefits. Meaningful work

Cons

Changes with processes at times

2.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits were okay. Three telephonic days per week.

Cons

While Monogram’s mission is meaningful, there were significant challenges that impacted the ability to provide quality client care. Productivity metrics often seemed to take precedence over individualized client needs, and social workers carried extremely large caseloads of approximately 500 members while managing extensive territories. Expectations included frequent cold-calling, unannounced home visits, and maintaining a high volume of daily visits despite significant drive time and documentation requirements. Frequent operational changes and shifting expectations created inconsistency, and there were times when social workers’ clinical judgment and professional expertise did not appear to be fully trusted or valued. The combination of large caseloads, extensive travel, high productivity demands, and ongoing turnover made the role difficult to sustain long term. Greater investment in staff support, manageable caseloads, and a stronger balance between metrics and client-centered care would improve both employee satisfaction and client outcomes.

3
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