Friendly environment but lacks support during crises - Behavioral Health Technician ICAN Employee Review

3.0
21 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

friendly staff and parents, flexible, work schedules, and tuition reimbursement

Cons

This place lacks behavioral understanding of their clients. There are situations that become potentially dangerous and no escalation plan in place. Lack of staff to support during escalations.

Explore other reviews about ICAN

5.0
23 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Incredibly talented team of providers across many disciplines! ICAN excels at providing well-rounded therapy for their clients. Healthy company culture, so much passion for what we do! Lots of opportunities for career growth within the company.

Cons

Pay is limited to what insurance is willing to reimburse.

4.0
11 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

ICAN Children’s Therapy has been a really great fit for me as a younger clinician who cares about values and growth—not just a paycheck. The work is clearly purpose-driven, and I can see the impact on kids and their families, which makes even the hard days feel worth it. What I appreciate most is it’s normal to ask questions and admit you don’t know something yet, and get support. There’s a lot of informal mentorship through quick consults, debriefs, and shared treatment ideas, so I never feel like I’m on an island. Collaboration across disciplines is real here, and ideas from newer staff are taken seriously, not brushed off because of age or years of experience. The culture is friendly and casual, not really corporate, and people genuinely show up for each other—celebrating wins with kids and checking in after tough sessions. The job is demanding and fast-paced, but leadership is pretty open to talking about burnout prevention and not glorifying it.

Cons

The pace is fast and the work has a lot of emotional load. The clinic is very busy, and as a newer clinician it can be challenging to juggle a full caseload, documentation, and learning on the fly, especially on days with multiple high‑need kids in a row. There are supports in place, but you have to advocate for yourself and set boundaries so you don’t slide toward burnout.

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