Pluspunten
Steve Gray and his board of overpaid Execs have left.
Minpunten
Working at Nuffield Health was nothing short of psychological warfare. Despite branding itself as a beacon of health and wellbeing, the internal culture is toxic, chaotic, and completely void of compassion or integrity. Over the years I was shuffled from one manager to another. No continuity, no real leadership—just a rotating door of micromanagement, contradictions, and cover-your-back politics. You’re under constant, crushing pressure to be perfect because failure, even minor, puts a target on your back. The fear of losing your job is ever-present—because at Nuffield, redundancy isn’t rare, it’s tradition. It’s not a question of if—just when. The currebt interium Chief People Officer, is the embodiment of everything wrong with this organisation. How a man with such an astonishing lack of empathy and awareness of what his teams actually do managed to climb to the top of a people-focused department is beyond comprehension. Team Coordinators like myself were treated with disdain—undervalued, underpaid, and ignored. He made it very clear, both directly and indirectly, that he didn’t respect or even understand our roles. The pay is insulting, especially considering the stress, unrealistic expectations, and the emotional toll the job takes on you. You give everything—and get nothing in return but anxiety and the slow erosion of your self-worth. My mental health was in tatters by the end of it. I stayed as long as I did because I knew layoffs were inevitable and figured I’d at least leave with something. That’s how low the bar was. The day I left Nuffield Health was the day I started feeling human again. The grass isn't just greener on the other side—it's safe, it's supportive, and it's not run by people who think wellbeing is a corporate buzzword. If you're considering working here, do yourself a favour and don't. No job is worth this level of misery.