Reviews by job title

3 reviews
1.0
13 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote/good coworkers that turned into friends.

Cons

Leadership sets you up for failure; not success. Unrealistic expectations while the ways implemented to get there make absolutely no sense. ZERO work/life balance. 30 min lunches… they went from unlimited PTO to basically none. Burnout is absolutely real at this company and I’m sure they know it & obviously do not care. MICROMANAGEMENT IS A REAL PROBLEM.

1.0
1 Jul 2026

Metrics matter more than patients- Quantity over quality

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Fully remote position. * Competitive pay for the role. * Good introduction to healthcare operations and patient scheduling. * Some coworkers are supportive and willing to help.

Cons

* Unrealistic productivity metrics that prioritize **speed over quality**. * Management focuses heavily on metrics and deficiencies rather than coaching employees to improve. Team managers themselves would benefit from stronger leadership development and support. * Feedback is often centered on what is wrong instead of what is going well. One of the biggest issues I experienced was the company's overwhelming focus on productivity metrics instead of the quality of patient interactions. Success seemed to be measured primarily by the number of calls or tasks completed rather than whether patients actually received meaningful assistance. In my opinion, this creates the wrong incentives. Anyone can complete a high number of calls, but that doesn't necessarily mean patients are receiving quality service or having their concerns fully resolved. A healthcare call center should prioritize **resolving patients' needs**, providing accurate information, and ensuring they feel heard—not simply moving on to the next call as quickly as possible. I also wish managers spent more time reviewing the quality of calls and coaching employees based on patient interactions rather than relying so heavily on numerical metrics. Constructive feedback on communication and patient care would have been far more valuable than simply tracking productivity. Focusing on quality alongside performance would benefit both employees and the patients the company serves. * Expectations can feel unrealistic and, at times, unattainable. * Employees may feel set up to fail rather than set up to succeed. * Communication from leadership can be inconsistent, making expectations unclear. * High turnover is not surprising given the level of pressure and burnout. One of my biggest frustrations was the lack of knowledgeable support from direct management. When I reached out with patient-specific questions or needed guidance on complex situations, my manager frequently had to escalate those questions to Learning & Development or other leaders because they were unable to answer them directly. Over time, I found myself relying on my own experience from handling patient calls rather than seeking help because waiting for answers through multiple levels of management often wasn't practical. While I understand that managers can't know everything, I expected my direct supervisor to be a reliable resource for day to day operational questions and coaching. Instead, it often felt like I had more hands-on knowledge from taking calls than the person responsible for leading and supporting the team. Strong leadership isn't just about tracking metrics... it's about having the knowledge and confidence to guide employees, solve problems, and help them succeed when challenges arise ! **The role itself was manageable. The lack of supportive leadership is what ultimately made it unsustainable.**

1.0
23 Jan 2026

Unrealistic expectations & micromanaging

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company is fully remote and the health benefits are good.

Cons

Expectations at this company are completely unrealistic and quickly lead to burnout. Employees are expected to work nonstop on highly repetitive tasks with little to no breathing room. Breaks and PTO have been reduced, and the workday was extended by an additional 30 minutes without meaningful compensation. Despite being presented as something else, this is essentially a call center environment where employees are treated like machines rather than people. The level of micromanagement is extreme and draining, and over time it destroys motivation, morale, and any sense of autonomy.

Glassdoor has 3 Medmo reviews submitted anonymously by Medmo employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Medmo is right for you.