Working At UCLA Health - Ask a Question | Comparably
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Q&A With UCLA Health Employees

You can turn great aspirations into great outcomes—for our patients and for yourself. At UCLA Health, you’ll be challenged and empowered in an atmosphere of learning and support, working alongside world-class colleagues whose work has helped forge our reputation as a healthcare leader. Every day, we practice what we preach, bringing us closer to our patients, to our community, and to each other as we work to improve health and positive outcomes for all we serve.

How employees describe working at UCLA Health

UCLA Health has a longcway to go to fix its crumbling customer service and patient quality of care. I have experienced longterm issues with scheduling appointments and customer service. There seems to be more talk then action the clinic staff continue to shrink and do less.

Unable to grow within the organization, no matter the years, experience or degrees. They gate keep the positions and management is bias

You are an aweful human and company

Best pay in the area

Very transparent, open communication, and receptive to feedback.

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Q&A With UCLA Health Employees

Вопрос для Admin Department UCLA Health

  • Very poor.

  • Not good at all.

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Вопрос для Admin Department UCLA Health

  • I work 8 hours and the vibe is casual in my office.

  • Hours worked are very reasonable. In fact, 8:30 to 5:00 is what I work. The vibe is ok. Not wonderful, ok.

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Вопрос для Admin Department UCLA Health

  • Operates loosely as a team. Has a very flawed leader.

  • 500/1000

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Communication. There is none right now and it causes disruption and a recognition that the person is worthless, not considered worthy of being advised of something that affects their own job. And communication in all aspects. I would also get professional help in hiring. UCLA hires incompetent people all over the place. You are hired if you're mediocre at your work. You're kept at UCLA if you're mediocre. Your work colleagues cannot bear anyone to be better than they, so your work time is often unbearable. They isolate you. Their hiring is criticized by many. Within UCLA, they put a totally unqualified person in charge of a team and he does not know how to handle people. This is a money centered institution, not a patient centered one.

  • Improve, increase communication between leadership and all levels of employees, between departments, within departments.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • It's a lucky draw. In my office, there have been four turnover in one position in 8 years. People don't last because it requires assisting three people and the money is low. They have been nasty, stupid, dishonest, jealous, one worked half a day, every day and she was supposed to work 8 hours. Nobody cared. Right now, the loveliest girl is leaving. She had been the only likable person in this position.

  • Because it's a State government institution, all kinds of people are employed here. Some smart, some mean, some ambitious, some stupid, some lovely, some old, some young, some untrustworthy. I have not made close friends here after many years. But I have made friends for life in other work places I have been.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Health and retirement. No parking.

  • Health coverage, retirement plans, generous public holidays.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Once a year for 3% called a merit raise; however, everybody gets 3% across the board (except for leadership which probably get $100,000 raises). This means we get no cost of living raise. Haven't had one for all the years I've worked here.

  • Raises are no more than 3% and are shameful in their frequency. They are called merit raises (even though everyone gets the same) and so there are no cost of living raises. Raises are not considered important for anyone other than leadership because their benefits package is what they sell the most. Admin staff are very poorly paid.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • I look foward to it.

  • I look forward to it. Even on Sunday nights.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • It's close to home. There are many people to interact with. I am always learning something.

  • Work independently.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • My friend works in UCLA’s Business Grad School admissions, and they get an automatic 4% raise annually, regardless of performance.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • It's friendly until you have a problem and then they totally ignore your problem I have twice been told to deal with it myself when it involved behavioral problems with a co-worker.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Telling friends I work at UCLA Health.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Never been on a team outing.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Depends on subject. We get a lot of notices about Chairs and Vice-Chancellors coming and going and we get results of surveys like this. All up I would say that we get pretty good feedback from leadership's surveys.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • It's a job. It pays the rent. I don't actually do work that has a direct impact on patients or anyone really. I could leave tomorrow and someone from the float pool would take my place so how important am I? No reward from a job where I am nobody.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Reasonably well.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • It has a lot of complexities as in "If this happens, then this.....or that will happen". Or "you can get family leave but after you have exhausted this leave which is only for that thing but as you're done this thing then that thing doesn't apply and you go without salary for so many days" etc etc and so forth.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Hard to know. I finish work at 5 and that's it for me. I can't speak for anyone else.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Honestly, I can't remember.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • For me, it was not difficult. Two interviews at the most. Other applicants (for director, project manager, physician, physician leader, etc.) are put through a rigorous set of interviews with a number of people, perhaps 5 - 10.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Clinics in the wider community is the fastest growing dept at UCLA Health. Primary Care with clinics in far reaches of the Valley, the South Bay, Malibu, Ventura County, and around Los Angeles itself. UCLA is constantly adding new practices, primary, secondary care with referrals to UCLA for tertiary and quaternary patients. I can't accurately address difficulties.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • The CEO is relatively new; however, since coming on board, several very high profile physicians have left and I believe because of her. The COO left because of the new leadership (I know from his mouth). She has radically changed UCLA Health - and undone all the wonderful work of her predecessor. She does not appear to have anything to do with anybody who is not in her inner circle. Prior CEO's walked the hospitals and clinics and spoke to all sorts of ppl - employees, patients, patients' families. They were visible and very much a part of the activities. The CEO is almost invisible to the bulk of us.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Very top heavy. A lot of disagreement. It does not operate like one company but rather each dept operates as its own company, causing friction between leadership of the Enterprise and the Chairs of the depts.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • Varies. But salaries bring a lot of people down and cause a pretty consistent turnover. Lack of communication, e.g., when YOU or someone's job is changed, or you report to a different person, this is not communicated to you. You find out by coming to work and seeing someone else doing your work.

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Вопрос для all employees из UCLA Health

  • They provide the standard benefit package. Nothing that most professional employers offer.

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Should I work at UCLA Health?

49% of UCLA Health employees would encourage their friends to become coworkers, whereas 17% are neutral and 34% would not recommend working at UCLA Health to their friends.

15
eNPS Score
49%Promoters
17%Passive
34%Detractors
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