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Cooper Health System

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Alleged Doctor Kickbacks Cost Cooper $12.6M

A Haddonfield doctor’s whistleblower lawsuit sparked an investigation that ended in a multimillion dollar settlement payment by Cooper Health System.

HADDONFIELD-HADDON TOWNSHIP, NJ -- Cooper Health System will pay $12.6 million to settle allegations the Camden hospital engaged in kickbacks to doctors as it built its cardiology program, state and federal officials said Thursday. Cooper agreed to pay the federal government $10.2 million and the state $2.3 million in the joint settlement, plus attorney’s fees of $430,000 to a whistleblower, Haddonfield cardiologist Dr. Nicholas DePace. The hospital also already implemented, and agreed to maintain, corporate reforms for accountability, training and other aspects of compliance. The settlement stems from a joint federal-state investigation into the financial ties between the Cooper Heart Institute in Camden, the Cooper Heart Institute …

Radiohead

2:51 pm on Monday, January 28, 2013

DiPace does not need that money for whistle blowing. I smell a rat. Are you kidding me?? He blew the whistle because it was way more lucrative to do so. Now if he donates the 2 million to charity then I will eat crow!!!   more ›

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Christie Ups HIV/AIDS Treatment by $19.5M Statewide

Four Camden County health systems—AHEC, Cooper, Lourdes, and the Hispanic Family Center of Southern New Jersey—will split $2.07M in South Jersey.

Four Camden County health systems will get a piece of nearly $20 million in state funding for HIV/AIDS treatment in New Jersey, according to an announcement from Gov. Chris Christie's office today. The Camden Area Health Education Center ($704,642), Cooper Health System ($976,753), the Hispanic Family Center of Southern New Jersey ($250,000) and Our Lady of Lourdes Health Foundation ($138,000) will each receive dollars for HIV counseling, testing and education, medical care and social services. The money was disbursed following the release of an additional $8 million in federal funding to New Jersey for AIDS and HIV treatment, said Health Commissioner Mary O'Dowd in a statement. More than 36,000 New Jersey residents live with HIV/AIDS, O'…

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