Pros
You learn a lot about healthcare, the specific specialties/applications you are assigned to, and how to work in a professional business atmosphere, which is especially valuable for someone straight out of college. The people for the most part are friendly and helpful, willing to teach you unfamiliar concepts or tough meetings.
Cons
You will quickly get more work than can handle, requiring you to work >50 hours per week to just 'get through', despite being told to 'take some time' to learn additional things, take a lunch, get to know your coworkers, etc. Being overwhelmed with work gets turned around to you and how you can solve your own problems through time management. There is also no remote working flexibility beyond a meager 5 WFH days per year, due to an archaic view that working in-office equates to higher productivity. A company that prides itself in soliciting and delivering feedback, yet upper management flagrantly ignores most requests for basic improvements (WFH, overwork, ergonomic improvements)