VNS Health reviews

3.2

61% would recommend to a friend

(931 total reviews)
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Dan Savitt

63% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

VNS Health has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 931 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The VNS Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

931 reviews
5.0
Nov 5, 2025

Proud to work at VNS Health!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Our mission is very important and impactful, and our executive leadership are committed to the mission, and doing a great job steering the ship. It feels good to work for a place that directly helps and impacts the lives of tens of thousands of New Yorkers who need medical support. I've been able to shift my career track within VNS Health too, and rise up the ladder over the 13 years I've been with the company, and it feels really good to work for a company that makes this kind of career progression possible and provides support to employees who are looking to grow their skills and experience.

Cons

It can be hard work sometimes, but work/life balance is good, time off is very generous, and the culture is very supportive of employee well-being and work/life balance.

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VNS Health Response
6mo
Thank you for sharing this and for your many years of commitment to VNS Health. Hearing that our mission, leadership, and impact resonate with you means a great deal to us. We’re especially glad to hear that you’ve been able to grow and shift your career path over time. Supporting learning, mobility, and long-term development is something we care deeply about, and it’s encouraging to hear that reflected in your experience. We also appreciate your honest perspective on the work itself. The work can be demanding, and we’re committed to maintaining a culture that supports well-being, balance, and time to recharge. Thank you for the work you do every day to support New Yorkers who rely on our care.
1.0
Oct 27, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good health benefits and reasonable PTO.

Cons

Executive/Upper management is not in touch with reality. They seem to be in their own little bubble. They seem more like politicians always around for photo op. Terrible/incompetent Directors and Managers are not held accountable for how poorly they treat their employees. The majority of the employees are unhappy in this organization. This is a non-profit organization that operates as a for-profit organization. Clearly patient and employees' wellbeing is not important for this organization. If you accept a position in this organization be prepare to be highly disappointed.

1.0
Dec 22, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The nursing orientation team (which was made up of one nursing orientation manager and two orientation nurses) was extremely supportive. Without them, I would not be where I am today. Unfortunately, I heard the whole team was laid off in 2014. My coworkers (fellow nurses, speech language pathologists, social workers, and physical and occupational therapists) were easy to get along.

Cons

-Position and Salary/Work-life Balance I was a part of VNSNY's new graduate RN program; most nurses in this program were hired as Per Diem. The rates at the time were $55 per patient; $58 on weekends and holidays; no time and a half; no OT, no benefits, no sick days. On a typical working day, I would see about 6-12 patients, and, on average, work at least 15 hours on a working day, and work at least 4-6 hours on my day off (completing charting, getting patients homecare plans figured out with HHAs, and returning MD calls). I literally never had time to see friends or family due to work. This is a common theme among all homecare nurses (full time, part time and per diem) I have met. -Work Culture There are a few managers (Nursing Field manager of different nursing team/areas, and the weekend/holiday managers) nurses work with. These managers are obsessed to fill quotas, if a nurse saw as many patients as possible, it was a great day for them. They do not care about quality of care for patients, it is all about quantity; and they do not see how burnt out their nurses are, nor do they care. Due to this work culture, I found myself completing unfinished work that other nurses did not have time to do. This is a toxic environment that starts with the managers that trickle down to the nurses, which ultimately leads to low quality of care for patients. Nurses are also hounded on for not completing charting on time (when a nurse is consistently working 15+ hours a day for at least 5 days a week, and have not finished charting on time, it is because they have been assigned a lot more work than they can handle). Every single nurse I have met during this time were burnt out (and some have not even worked a year at the position), and said they were not happy with their job and was planning on quitting. -Union I still do not understand why per diem nurses pay union dues (United Federation of Teachers union). Since orientation, union representatives always said, "Per diem nurses have no rights, only full time nurses have rights." Per diem nurses paying them to do nothing is ridiculous. When the 2013 and 2014 massive lay-offs were happening, the union was not able to do anything for their full time employees as well.

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