- Cooper University Hospital
-
Cooper University Hospital Geography Location Camden, New Jersey, U.S. Organisation Hospital type Teaching Affiliated university Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Services Standards JCAHO Emergency department Level I trauma center Helipad Yes Beds 540 Speciality Interventional cardiology, Neurosurgery, Critical Care History Founded 1887 Links Website http://www.cooperhealth.org Lists Cooper University Hospital is a provider of health services, medical education, and clinical research in southern New Jersey and the Delaware Valley, in the United States. The hospital is a clinical campus of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey – Robert Wood Johnson Medical School at Camden, New Jersey and offers training programs for medical students, residents, fellows, nurses, and allied health professionals in a variety of specialties.
Contents
Overview
The Trauma Center at Cooper University Hospital was established in 1982 and is one of only three New Jersey State-Designated Level I Trauma Centers. It is certified by the American College of Surgeons[1] and serves as the regional trauma center for southern New Jersey including Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Mercer, Ocean and Salem counties and acts as a resource for the Level II Trauma Centers in the South Jersey region. A Level I Trauma Center cares for severely injured patients including persons involved in motor vehicle crashes, falls, and assaults with guns, knives, or other blunt objects. On average, Cooper treats more than 2,700 trauma patients each year, making it the busiest center in New Jersey.
In addition, Cooper University Hospital serves as Southern New Jersey’s major tertiary-care referral hospital for specialized services. Cooper's primary services are: the Bone & Joint Institute, Cancer Institute, Critical Care Medicine, Heart Institute, Level 1 Trauma Center, Neurological Institute and Urological Institute.
The hospital launched the only medical evacuation helicopter service in Cumberland County during December 2010. [2]
Commercials for the hospital have featured talk show host Kelly Ripa.[3]
Expansion
In June 2004, Cooper University Hospital announced a $220 million expansion to the hospital's Health Sciences Campus that includes a new patient care pavilion attached to the existing facility. Subsequently, plans for the new patient care pavilion were expanded from six floors (211,000 sq ft.) to ten floors (312,000 sq ft.), with the inclusion of additional landscape improvements and patient amenity design features.
Cooper University Hospital's pavilion project is part of the hospital's efforts to create a regional health science campus in Camden, which will also include a new $130 million Academic and Research Building, as well as a stem cell institute, cancer institute, clinical research building, clinical office building and additional off-street parking.
Designed by EwingCole of Philadelphia, the patient pavilion opened in December 2008 and the hospital's orientation was shifted from Haddon Avenue to Martin Luther King Boulevard, as visitors began entering the hospital through the new lobby and utilizing the Camden County Improvement Authority parking, which connects to the hospital via an enclosed walkway.
History
The origins of Cooper University Hospital can be traced to 1887, when a prominent Quaker family named Cooper opened a hospital to provide medical care for the population of Camden. Richard M. Cooper, M.D., four of his brothers and sisters and one nephew donated money and land for the hospital to be built between Sixth and Seventh Streets, from Mickle to Benson Streets. Though the four-story, stone building was completed in 1877, the original 30-bed hospital stood empty for 10 years until enough money was available to open for patients in August 1887.
In the first 100 years of the hospital's existence, additions to the original building and the construction of freestanding structures on the surrounding 5 acres (20,000 m2) of land further anchored the Cooper Hospital campus in Camden. Eventually the small community hospital turned into a 540-bed regional tertiary care center that cared for the population's most critically ill patients.
Cooper Hospital eventually became The Cooper Health System and the clinical campus of the University of Medicine and Dentistry / Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. Cooper Hospital/University Medical Center (now Cooper University Hospital) became one component of an integrated health care delivery system called The Cooper Health System in 1996.
In April 2007, Cooper University Hospital treated New Jersey Governor Jon S. Corzine who had suffered an open femur fracture and severe chest injuries due to a car accident on the Garden State Parkway.
References
External links
- cooperhealth.org, Cooper University Hospital official website
New Jersey Trauma Centers List of hospitals in New Jersey Level I Trauma Centers UMDNJ-University Hospital • Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital • Cooper University HospitalLevel II Trauma Centers Hackensack University Medical Center • St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center • Jersey City Medical Center • Morristown Memorial Hospital • Capital Health System at Fuld • Jersey Shore Medical Center • AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center City DivisionNJ Trauma Centers at the Office of Emergency Medical Services Categories:- Buildings and structures in Camden County, New Jersey
- Camden, New Jersey
- Hospitals established in 1887
- Hospitals in New Jersey
- University hospitals in the United States
- University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.