Quantum mechanics is used in very different ways by people in quantum information, condensed matter, many body physics, quantum field theory, nuclear physics and may other (sub)fields.
Of course it will be difficult for a quantum information theorist if they try to apply what they know directly to a hydrogen atom, but (speaking from experience) it will also be quite difficult for someone trained in what you call Hermitian quantum mechanics to directly apply what they know to quantum field theory, or quantum information or any other subfield that uses different language.
I strongly disagree with your summary "if you know Hermitian quantum mechanics then unitary quantum mechanics is conceptually straightforward. If you know unitary quantum mechanics then you will have a lot of new concepts and mathematics to learn before you understand hermitian quantum mechanics".
I challenge anyone trained in Hermitian quantum mechanics to make progress on (for example) proving or disproving the generalised quantum Stein's lemma, or any of the unsolved problems here https://arxiv.org/abs/2002.03233 using those methods.