Scam of a Company - RN Care Manager Monogram Health Employee Review

1.0
Dec 14, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay is decent, bi weekly pay.

Cons

Middle 'management' are nags, the workload is great for the allotted timeframes. Everything is based off of Initial Enrollments. not actual patient care. they only get paid by the amount of patients enrolled into the program. Instead they only want you to throw paper at them and leave. it’s all a numbers game then drive 20mins to your next patient. No time to pee/ or eat lunch. and you better chart on the patient within 4hrs hours or you will have operations managers yelling at you and middle senior managers that back her up. It’s very hard to care for a patient when working for a company that just wants numbers on a sheet. Oh your patient is going to be homeless?! No bother. we don't care. but did you get the IE? (initial enrollment). Oh and be prepared to not have health insurance for a while after starting. also you will pay around $6,000- $7,000 a year. All of the above gave me the motivation to find a new case manager job.

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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