Pros
• Patients are generally kind, appreciative, and grateful for care • Mission-driven population that values continuity and provider relationships • Opportunity to gain experience in community health / FQHC setting • Colleagues at the frontline level are often dedicated and clinically capable
Cons
• Leadership prioritizes productivity metrics, cost containment, and financial performance over clinical judgment, provider well-being, and sustainability • Burnout is widespread due to excessive workloads, poor boundary enforcement, and minimal structural support • Benefits are limited and poorly structured; clinicians are routinely nickel-and-dimed over time, resources, and minor expenses • Low psychological safety; staff are reluctant to raise concerns due to fear of retaliation, increased scrutiny, or marginalization • Hostile workplace behaviors toward new providers are tolerated, with leadership failing to intervene • Favoritism and nepotism undermine fairness, trust, and transparency • Publicly disclosed executive compensation appears elevated when compared to frontline cost-cutting, limited benefits, and high clinician turnover • High turnover disrupts continuity of care, affects morale, and negatively impacts patient access and trust