Hospital & Medical Center Workers

Your Employer May Be Stealing Your Time — and Your Pay

Hospitals and medical centers across the country use time rounding, automatic meal break deductions, and off-the-clock work demands that quietly strip nurses, CNAs, medical assistants, technicians, and call center workers of wages they legally earned.

$850M+
Recovered Nationwide
25+
Years Fighting for Workers
$0
Cost Regardless of Outcome
Class
Actions & Collective Cases
The Core Violation

How Time Rounding Robs Healthcare Workers

Time rounding seems technical, but the impact is simple: your employer records fewer minutes than you actually worked and pays you accordingly. Multiplied across every shift and every pay period, even small rounding differences add up to hundreds — or thousands — of dollars per year.

What Is Time Rounding?

Many hospitals use timekeeping systems that don't record your exact clock-in and clock-out times. Instead, they round your time to the nearest quarter-hour or some other interval. Under federal law, rounding is only lawful if it balances out over time — sometimes favoring the employee, sometimes the employer. When a hospital's system consistently rounds in the employer's favor, that is an illegal payroll practice.

How Employers Exploit Rounding

In practice, hospital payroll systems are often configured so that clocking in early gets rounded forward — you lose those minutes — and clocking out late gets rounded backward — you lose those minutes too. The rounding never works in your favor, only theirs. Even a few minutes per shift, multiplied across hundreds of employees over months or years, adds up to an enormous amount of stolen wages.

A Real-World Example: The Vanishing Minutes

Clock In 6:52 AM Rounded to 7:00 AM — 8 minutes lost
Clock Out 7:08 PM Rounded to 7:00 PM — 8 minutes lost
That's 16 minutes stolen per day. For a nurse working 5 shifts a week, that's over 69 hours of unpaid work per year — plus any overtime premium owed on those hours. Across an entire nursing unit, the losses run into the millions.
Your Job, Your Rights

Wage Violations by Healthcare Job Title

Every hourly healthcare role comes with its own patterns of wage theft. Here's what workers in your position commonly experience — and what the law says you are owed.

🩺
Registered Nurses (RN) & Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN)
  • Time rounding — clock-in and clock-out times rounded consistently in the employer's favor, shaving compensable minutes from every shift
  • Pre-shift and post-shift duties — receiving patient handoff reports, reviewing charts, setting up medication carts before the shift starts; completing documentation and patient transitions after it ends
  • Meal break violations — whether an employee clocks out and then is called back to work during the break, or whether the hospital's system automatically deducts 30 minutes regardless of whether a full, uninterrupted break was taken
🤝
Medical Assistants, CNAs, Patient Care Technicians & Admissions Staff
  • Time rounding — minutes at the start and end of each shift rounded away without compensation
  • Pre-shift and post-shift duties — donning PPE and gloves, stocking supplies, preparing exam rooms, running system logins, and briefing incoming staff — all before or after the official shift
  • Meal break violations — automatic 30-minute deductions taken even when patient care, urgent room turnover, or high admission volume required the employee to remain at their post or be called back during the break
📞
Call Center & Patient Services Representatives
  • Time rounding — clock-in and clock-out times rounded in the employer's favor, erasing minutes actually worked each shift
  • Pre-call setup time — booting systems, logging into phone queues, EHR and scheduling platforms, reviewing emails and patient queues, and completing required compliance steps before the clock starts
  • Time worked during meal breaks — remaining on queue or handling patient inquiries during a break period that is nonetheless fully deducted from pay
  • Post-shift wrap-up — completing call notes, closing tickets, and logging out of systems after the scheduled shift ends
💊
Pharmacy Technicians
  • Time rounding — minutes at the start and end of each shift rounded away without compensation
  • Pre-shift and post-shift duties — counting controlled substances, reviewing overnight orders, and setting up dispensing systems before the clock starts; performing end-of-day reconciliation and inventory counts after it ends
  • Meal break violations — automatic deductions taken during busy dispensing periods when staffing is insufficient to relieve the technician for a full, uninterrupted break
🧹
Environmental Services, Dietary & Food Services, and Security Officers
  • Time rounding — clock-in and clock-out times rounded in the employer's favor at the start and end of every shift
  • Pre-shift and post-shift duties — collecting cleaning supplies and PPE, preparing food service equipment, conducting security briefings and equipment checks, and restocking or returning equipment — all performed before or after the official shift
  • Meal break violations — automatic deductions applied even when room turnover, meal service rushes, or security coverage obligations required the employee to remain on duty through the break period
Your Legal Remedies

What You May Be Entitled to Recover

Federal and state wage laws provide meaningful remedies for workers who have been underpaid. You may be entitled to far more than just the wages you were shorted.

Unpaid Wages & Overtime Premiums

Every minute of compensable work time that was rounded away, deducted without basis, or performed off the clock must be paid at your regular rate — plus time-and-a-half for any hours that should have pushed you over 40 in a workweek.

Liquidated (Double) Damages

Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, employees who prevail in wage claims are potentially entitled to an additional equal amount in liquidated damages — effectively doubling your recovery.

Up to 3 Years of Back Pay

Willful FLSA violations extend the lookback period to three years. State law claims may reach further, depending on where you work. For example, California law looks back up to four years, while New York and New Jersey law looks back up to six years.

Attorney's Fees & Costs

The FLSA requires employers who lose wage cases to pay your legal fees and court costs. You pay nothing out of pocket — regardless of the outcome of your case.

Class & Collective Action Recovery

When many employees at the same hospital experience the same violations, we can pursue collective or class actions that benefit all affected workers simultaneously — and maximize leverage against the employer.

Why Shavitz Law Group

Fought for Workers Like You for Over 25 Years

We handle wage and hour class and collective actions exclusively on behalf of employees — never employers. Your case is our only side.

$0

Cost Regardless of Outcome

We advance all costs and our fees come only from a recovery on your behalf. You will never receive a bill from us — win or lose.

25+

Years Fighting for Workers

Since 1999, Shavitz Law Group has focused exclusively on workers' wage rights — in healthcare, manufacturing, retail, and beyond.

100%

Employee-Side Only

We have never represented an employer in a wage case. Our sole focus is making sure workers receive every dollar they earned.

Your job is protected. Federal law prohibits employers from retaliating against employees who assert their wage rights or participate in a wage and hour lawsuit. You cannot lawfully be fired, demoted, or disciplined for contacting us or joining a case.

You Earned It.
Now Let's Go Get It.

A free, confidential case review costs nothing and commits you to nothing. Tell us about your situation and we'll tell you honestly whether you have a claim.

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