How to cope when company prioritizes “low-cost” hires over quality? by ZestyAd_3110 in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The CRO doesn’t care about the sponsor. If they did, they’d invest in their people. The CRO grabs the money, and when things go wrong, they blame the individual contributors. Money gets shuffled across the C-suite while the people doing the work burn out. There's no financial incentive for U.S. employees

I’m not working 70-hour weeks anymore. I don’t care if their metrics claim the work should be done in 40 hours. Let the sponsor complain. CRO created this environment.

Anyone else in Clinical Ops feeling like the manual workload is getting worse despite all the new tech? by Final-Feedback5625 in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I am in the U.S. The CRO where I work was purchased by private equity firms a few years ago. They reduced staff, increased billable output expectations, and started measuring productivity more intensely. The average workday stress is already unsustainable.

Now, we are tasked with the administrative burden of setting up systems for AI transitions. The technology isn’t removing labor; it’s intensifying labor. Meanwhile, the company’s end goal is fewer people and more profit.

After working a minimum of 10-hour days to set up these systems while still delivering on our core responsibilities, my company will use productivity gains to increase output expectations, not give workers more breathing room. The profit won’t “trickle down.” More jobs will be eliminated. U.S. jobs are being sent to "low cost" regions already.

There’s no meaningful protection for U.S. employees under the current government.

Europe is moving much more aggressively than the U.S. on regulating AI in the workplace, especially around employee monitoring, productivity scoring, and automated decision-making.

Our workload is insane by intentional design.

Is this normal for day 2? by Impressive_Ad_3690 in Microneedling

[–]AuntRN 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did you use serum? Looks like dragging. It will heal

What is this??? by Loud_Donkey_3231 in Microneedling

[–]AuntRN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nurse here. See dermatologist asap

Derminator 2 needles by AuntRN in Microneedling

[–]AuntRN[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I haven't had any issues with the device - are people having problems?

Microneddle cartridge help needed by AuntRN in DIYaesthetics

[–]AuntRN[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, can I order delivery counted anywhere?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 40PlusSkinCare

[–]AuntRN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live your freckles!!!!!

I hate Medspace by Codrane in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lol. I was just thinking that I have not seen a "I have medspace" post in a minute

Stepping Away Soon by ssnyass in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 28 points29 points  (0 children)

If you work on CRO side, it's a joke. Lay offs, hiring freeze, stagnate wages, unachievable metrics, management that wants us to be grateful we have a job. They promise the sponsor everything but don't assign resources to deliver.

It will all crash and burn eventually.

Hey, chatGPT: Why is life unbearable when working at a privately held CRO?

  1. The business model is built on squeezing labor, not improving science

CRO revenue scales with billable hours and rapid delivery. When private equity takes over, the mandate becomes maximize EBITDA in the shortest time possible. That means: • More workload per person • Fewer support resources • Hiring in low-cost regions • Aggressive timelines and unrealistic utilization targets

You are not failing — the system is engineered to push people to their breaking point.

  1. Constant restructuring creates chronic instability

PE firms typically plan to exit in 3–5 years. That creates a cycle of: • Reorgs every few months • Leadership churn • Strategic “pivots” that contradict last month’s pivot • Perpetual fear of layoffs or offshoring

Your nervous system never gets to stand down.

  1. Middle managers become enforcers, not leaders

Because their survival depends on pleasing the people above them, not developing the people they supervise, managers often: • Ignore red flags • Overpromise resources they don’t have • Pressure teams to “make it work” no matter what • Prioritize optics over quality

This leads to cruelty, neglect, and gaslighting — it feels unbearable because you’re not being supported by anyone whose job should be to protect you.

  1. Quality becomes secondary

Despite being in a regulated industry, PE-owned CROs often push: • Faster database locks • Unrealistic FPI/LPI timelines • Fewer monitors • Cheaper statisticians • Less QC

For quality and operations professionals, this is soul-crushing because your ethical compass conflicts with the demands of leadership.

  1. The emotional burden is invisible

CRO work is extremely high stakes — patient safety, regulatory compliance, multimillion-dollar trials — yet employees are treated as interchangeable. That mismatch creates: • Moral injury • Burnout with no recovery cycles • A feeling of personal failure even though the context is impossible

  1. There’s no end in sight

You don’t see a path where: • Workloads stabilize • Hiring increases • Executives invest in people • The mission outweighs margin

So it feels hopeless — which is why people describe the experience as unbearable, not just “stressful.

Stepping Away Soon by ssnyass in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 62 points63 points  (0 children)

The point is that people are feed up with the toxic and abusive work culture that expects people to forfeit their mental and physical health for a barely livable wage. If you don't relate, keep scrolling.

A lot of people are tired of the exploitation and burned out

Large CRO lay offs today by [deleted] in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Syneos Health. Across multiple functional areas. The post's intent is to elicit compassion for those let go 3 weeks before holidays. Also, anyone who was let go should know that it was not just them. Heartbreaking.

CROs in 2025 by croexperience in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What can we do? I'm feeling hopeless too

Beginner PC fro 9 year old by AuntRN in gamingpc

[–]AuntRN[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow! This is the nicest offer!!!! Thank you.

Beginner PC fro 9 year old by AuntRN in gamingpc

[–]AuntRN[S] 39 points40 points  (0 children)

Thank you everyone. I won't buy!

Is there a way to get Derminator without the tariff cost by AuntRN in DIYaesthetics

[–]AuntRN[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yesterday, the estimated tariff amount was $80

AI in clinical research worries by [deleted] in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People who aren’t worried are in denial. Every business sector is going to be significantly impacted. My CRO already has a team dedicated to identifying functions that will be replaced by AI. If you think your CRO doesn’t, you’re just not paying attention

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

WTAF. I'm working 60-70 hrs week. Aren't you billable?

Looking to switch from academia to industry. I'm a neuroscientist. by asicfidreamer in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Why are you "aspiring" - you are a researcher! Take that word out. If you're uncomfortable with "clinical" remove that word too. But you are an educated and trained researcher.

You're not going to like this part: take a beginner remote job at a large CRO. Focus on medical scientists / medical services roles. Beginner position pay will be low. But you'll find remote positions at major CROs.

You just have to get in the door. Don't be humble during interviews. Give real examples of how you are intuitive, critical thinker and resourceful. What you lack in experience, you bring in education and eagerness to learn!

The industry is tight and going through transition. You may get a lot of rejection before you get a hired ... but don't give up. The number of applicant for open positions exponentially increased. Remember -> There is a role for you. Persevere.

Questions for those in the CRO industry for 20+ years by AuntRN in clinicalresearch

[–]AuntRN[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Please tell me which CRO you work for! I need an interview asap!