Medical Screener - Medical Screener Octapharma Plasma Employee Review

2.0
23 Jun 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the best reason to work for Octapharma Plasma is I got to learn, and preform different procedures, as in drawing blood samples from donors finger, using capillary tubes. Recording vital signs. Checking to make sure that the donor is healthy enough to donate is my part of the whole procedure. They offer great benefits. Its a easy job but yet business oriented job.

Cons

They are unorganized. They never have the schedule made on time. The employees have to call the next day to see if they have to work. They have a lot of favoritism going on in Octapharma Plasma. The Center is not in order. They are under Inspections all the time. Donors do what they want to do. Donors are very rude.

Explore other reviews about Octapharma Plasma

5.0
30 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company to work for

Cons

No cons to report today

1.0
2 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Flexible scheduling coordination between coworkers (when staffing allows, just work it out amongst yourselves, I promise you will regret involving managers in there), including opening and closing shifts * Exposure to fast-paced, high-volume clinical and donor-facing workflow * Opportunity to collaborate with coworkers across multiple operational roles * Experience adapting to shifting responsibilities across screening, production, and medical support functions * Direct involvement in donor care workflow and real-time clinical operations

Cons

* Attendance/point system lacks nuance for real-world emergencies, including natural disasters or unavoidable delays * Minor tardiness (even with communication) can result in disciplinary points * Absences and no-call/no-shows are treated similarly within a narrow point threshold system * In practice, employees can reach termination thresholds quickly without contextual consideration * Perceived inconsistency in application of attendance and scheduling policies * Some schedule adjustments or accommodations appear to be applied selectively or inconsistently * Communication around enforcement and policy changes is not always clearly standardized * Investigation and disciplinary processes can feel simultaneous rather than neutral * Employees involved in reported incidents may perceive outcomes as predetermined during review processes * This creates concern that corrective actions may be initiated before full context is established * Role instability for clinical staff during shifts * Employees are frequently reassigned between clinical and operational tasks * This can create tension between maintaining patient care responsibilities and meeting production demands * Repeated task switching can impact workflow efficiency and staff focus * Operational restructuring often increases workload on remaining staff * Staffing shortages are frequently managed through redistribution of duties rather than adding coverage * This results in overlapping responsibilities and reduced downtime during shifts

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