Toxic to work in - Executive Team Leader HonorHealth Employee Review

1.0
9 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

CEO cares about the product and Community outreach

Cons

Senior leadership lacks the competence and vision needed to effectively guide the organization. Decision-making at the executive level is often disconnected from day-to-day realities. The culture is highly toxic, with leadership frequently taking credit for employees’ ideas and work while publicly promoting a false narrative of “teamwork.” Transparency is a major issue. Leadership routinely provides misleading or untruthful information, even when employees are fully aware of the facts. Performance is not rewarded fairly. Employees who consistently do the work and carry the workload are penalized or ignored, while those who contribute little are promoted. Poor leadership accountability creates a demoralizing environment where favoritism outweighs merit. Many leaders are resistant to change and lack up-to-date knowledge of modern practices, tools, and process improvements that could significantly benefit the organization. Innovation is discouraged, and constructive feedback is often met with defensiveness rather than action. Career growth is limited unless you align with leadership politics rather than performance. Overall, leadership demonstrates an inability to lead effectively or inspire confidence, making this a company I would strongly caution others against joining.

Explore other reviews about HonorHealth

5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

very kind staff. understanding people who want to create an environment for patients to thrive

Cons

sometimes stressful but still very rewarding if you remember why you're there.

4.0
25 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Reasonable workload at most facilities, some more than others. Supportive hospital (and some outpatient clinic) management. Most of the staff get along pretty well. The best training processes for students and new grads you will find in the state of Arizona in my opinion to jumpstart a career and prepare you to work anywhere.

Cons

A physician-first top heavy culture, where the system is structured to prioritize physician and upper management authority, preferences, and protection above other departments (like nursing, imaging, RTs), even when it creates operational strain or safety concerns. It is apparent how decisions get made by upper management, who gets backed in those decisions, and who absorbs institutional risk when adverse events occur, leaving staff exposed in questionable situations. There are many gaps in departmental workflow processes and ambiguous policy language as a result of this.

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