Pros
You will be enticed by a large yearly salary.
Cons
It's the insurance world. A billion dollar company. They are about making the company money. They want to limit the therapy and other mental health treatments. The cognitive dissonance of this job is that you are helping funds be used appropriately but in reality, they are watching their bottom line grow. There are people who need treatment but will have it denied. For example, if a clinician does not respond to outreaches to complete a clinical review, treatment will most times just be denied, based on new real reason except they didn't hear back from already overworked therapists. Many of the clinicians who work on the team that review outpatient therapy have not worked as actual therapists for many years. They are asked to evaluate the 'medical necessity' of treatment in a 10 minute conversation. You will also be asked to take on more and more responsibility. You will be evaluated by numbers each month--how long was your call, how long between your next call, all calls are recorded. If you enjoy micromanagement and being evaluated by metrics each month, this is a great job for you.