Remote-job scams targeting hourly and sales applicants have been on the rise. Before you reply to anyone claiming to be from Ez Health, take a minute to check what's real and what isn't.
Anyone reaching out to you on behalf of Ez Health will use an @ez.health email address. If the address ends in anything else — gmail.com, outlook.com, a random look-alike domain — assume it's not us.
Our main recruiters
We're growing fast, so lots of Ez Health employees pitch in on the early interviews — the names won't always be the three above. The one thing that will always be true: their email address ends in @ez.health.
Not during the interview. Not as part of an offer. Not for equipment, training, certifications, background checks, or anything else. Ever.
If someone claiming to be from Ez Health asks you to send money, wire funds, buy gift cards, or pay a fee to “secure your role,” stop the conversation and report it to us at jobs@ez.health.
A few interview steps ask you to record your screen so we can see how you approach a task. We recommend ScreenCastify, a popular free Chrome extension — but you're welcome to use any screen-recording tool you already trust (QuickTime, Loom, OBS, etc.).
We will never ask you to install any other software — no remote-desktop apps, no “employee portal” downloads, no banking add-ons. If someone tells you to install something unfamiliar, that's a scam.
Some people might think so!
But talking to seniors on the phone, navigating the healthcare system and all the time not giving up or backing down is hard work — this is why we pay good money for it, and why Medicare reimburses this work for us. And Medicare reimburses it because when seniors get lost in the healthcare maze, they end up costing even more money, going to the nursing home, or even dying — all of these are outcomes that are cheaper to prevent than to treat.
Forward suspicious emails or screenshots to jobs@ez.health and we'll confirm whether it's legit. When in doubt, slow down — real opportunities will always wait for you to check.