
Sleep Services at Cape Regional Medical Center is an AASM-accredited sleep center located in Cape May Court House, NJ. The clinic specializes in home sleep testing, in-lab sleep testing (Polysomnography), and sleep medicine consultation.
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Verified patient experiences
My daughter was admitted to pediatric floor after we went to ER for ongoing illness. Anyways from the time my sassy princess walked until she fell asleep, EVERYONE WAS IS AMAZING!! Admissions, security, nurses, Dr, xray tech, Alan that brought us to our room, David, Matt, Suzy and Sarah to name some, oh and the hospital Director too. Peyton loves her new book she received, all the attention and check ins even though she seems like she’s not sick. I’m really impressed this time around, My faith in this hospital has been restored
If I could give 0 stars I would! This summer this er failed to do neccessary testing on my father when he broke his neck! And now, my dad in failing health, and I have been waiting 3 hours to see a doctor, as his fever gets worse. There have been no updates and the nurse ordered an exray, and we were told nothing of it until I asked. He has an IV started, no fluids and no doctor. We have a suspicion its pnemonia and dehydration. And his fever slowly climbing and cough gets worse. Plus Im watching nurses and staff on cell phones and eating as they are walking around. Very unprofessional and unsanitary. Cape Regional was better before Cooper took over. Thought this was supposed to raise the bar?
With not many options while on vacation, I brought my husband here in the middle of the night. I am not sure if it was due to the time, but I was so relieved and impressed that they took him right in. Although the initial nurse that took him back was annoyed and rude, his main nurse was lovely, compassionate and skilled. He liked his doctor as well. It was the shortest ER visit I have ever experienced. I am shocked to see the bad reviews. I am glad I had not read them prior to my husband’s visit. As far as ER goes, I was impressed.
Two photos are from the ER bathroom, and two are from the Garden State Parkway rest area, where we stopped to use the restroom. Guess which ones are from the Cooper Cape ER? I was there for over five hours. When I alerted the staff about an issue with the bathroom, they said it was not their job. The nurse also snapped at me because the person I was with needed to use the bathroom frequently. She tried to instruct me on how to unhook the patient's IV, heart monitor, blood pressure cuff, and other hookups. I politely explained that as soon as she sent human resources down to find out where to send my paycheck for doing her job, I would be happy to do it. There is no reason a patient's family should be hooking and unhooking an IV. The icing on the cake was the blood draw station in a literal closet full of junk stuffed to the back. Do better Cooper University.
I just spent four days in Cooper Hospital at Cape May Courthouse, and it was an absolute nightmare. Every single day I was given a different diagnosis—spider bites, shingles, chickenpox—you name it. They were clearly guessing and had no clue what was actually going on. Meanwhile, they loaded me up with antibiotics, steroids, Benadryl, and more, like I was a science experiment. The infectious disease doctor Googled something right in front of me. That was the moment I knew I needed to get out before they did more harm. The facility itself? Disgusting. There was trash and bug traps on the floor, and I had to walk to the cafeteria just to get water because nurses weren’t responding. The syringe container in my room was overflowing—literally dangerous—and even though I pointed it out, no one bothered to change it. They moved me from a private room into one with an elderly woman who used the bedside commode all day long, two feet from my bed. Zero privacy, zero dignity. After four days of hell and no real answers, I discharged myself. I’ll be following up with a specialist elsewhere who might actually try to figure out what’s going on. Save yourself the stress and steer clear of this place. EDIT: I was able to determine that I had poison Ivy. All that craziness in the hospital and they couldn’t determine it. Instead, they just guessed and guessed and guessed. Also, I did call the advocate left a message & never got a return phone call.