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CLEVELAND CLINIC: Clinic's CEO wants to help

Cosgrove hints at what institution might bring to Las Vegas

Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said Wednesday that he doesn't care whether the local medical community supports or opposes a plan to bring the Cleveland Clinic to downtown Las Vegas.

The head of the Cleveland Clinic, meanwhile, gave a tiny hint as to what the institution might consider building in Symphony Park, next to the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health.


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Dr. Toby Cosgrove said the trend "we're generally heading for as we expand in other places" is outpatient services, a broad category of health care that's received outside of traditional hospitals.

But he wouldn't be specific.

"We don't know," said Cosgrove, the clinic's president and CEO. "We need to understand the market. We know there are good doctors here. We're not interested particularly in going nose-to-nose with people.

"We need to understand what's here, what the strengths are, how we can help, what the opportunities are."

Goodman expressed frustration that previous efforts to bring the Cleveland Clinic and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to Las Vegas met with opposition from the local medical community.

"During the course of romancing (the Cleveland Clinic), the local doctors were up in arms," Goodman said.

" 'We can do it,' they would say. 'Let us do it. You don't need Cleveland Clinic.' I said, 'Well, do it.' Of course, they didn't."

Cosgrove wouldn't comment on whether the complementary approach he outlined might head off some local opposition, saying he didn't know the local medical community well enough.

Goodman was more blunt.

"The good thing is, we don't care," he said.

Goodman then brought up the recent dark chapter in local medical history -- the endoscopy clinic that was caught reusing syringes and vials of medicine, breaches of medical procedure that may have put thousands at risk of contracting blood-borne diseases.

"After the endoscopy situation, if we hadn't taken the stupid (business) license off the wall, they might still be open with the way they do business around here," Goodman said. "I really don't care if the local docs object or not."

Both men made their comments at a meeting of the Review-Journal's editorial board.

A written request for comment was submitted to the Clark County Medical Society late Wednesday. There was no response by press time.

The Cleveland Clinic is studying what could be developed on four parcels in Symphony Park, a 61-acre former brownfield that so far is home to the Lou Ruvo center and the under-construction Smith Center for the Performing Arts.

The city of Las Vegas owns the land.

Under the current agreement with the clinic, the city would donate two of the parcels for development. The conveyance of the other two, either by donation or sale, hasn't been settled yet.

Cosgrove said three things are attractive about Southern Nevada: its historical fast growth, the lack of academic medicine and an openness to experimentation.

"You're fast growing and ... you're one of the only major cities in the United States that doesn't have an academic medical center," he said.

"If ever there were entrepreneurs, here you are. You'll try anything. If someone says, 'Well, this is the way a hotel has got to be designed,' you guys couldn't stand that."

Contact reporter Alan Choate at achoate@reviewjournal.com or 702-229-6435.

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The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

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John wrote on November 25, 2009 10:09 AM: Too_much_government is wrong. Cosgrove make $1.4 million a year, for running a $6.2 billion enterprise. That is way less than the $4 million that Jeff Romoff makes a year at UPMC


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Healthcare Guru wrote on October 28, 2009 11:16 AM: Leave it to someone from Vegas to say "Why not just give the land to Wynn for a new casino, rather than the Cleveland Clinic for a hospital and the city's first Academic Medical Center".....wow. Just when I thought people in Vegas had SOME common 'cents'.


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lee han il wrote on October 17, 2009 08:53 AM: korea.lee han il.545-873.Jeollanamdo.Gwangyang Si.Gwangyuon don.723-1.+82-010-4650-3032.+82-061-794-3032


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Too_much_government wrote on September 24, 2009 07:59 PM: CEO salary is set by the non-profit's Board of Trustees. Large institutions (like Mooch Clinic) typically have a "compensation committee" (AKA ratchet, ratchet, and BING), composed of a subset of the Trustees, who hire a "compensation consultant" (at $450/hr) to discover what "competitors" (other "charity" hospitals) are paying their CEO's.

Disgusting, isn't it.


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Cindy wrote on September 24, 2009 06:27 PM: $7.5 million annual salary? Can somebody tell me who controls the salaries paid to CEOs of non-profit organizations? There aren't any shareholders to do this so how does that work?


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Dahn.Shaulis wrote on September 24, 2009 03:22 PM: Perhaps this is more welfare for the rich. But there is a bigger issue here. Can Las Vegas (and Clark County) be more progressive, not just in high-tech medical care delivery, but in terms of health and quality of life? How about a smarter city with more sidewalks, shade, trees, bike paths and trails? How about developing a city and county where people walk more or use inexpensive and effective public transit? How about a city without a McDonald's or a liquor store on every corner? How about a city and county that reduces crime and violence by looking at redevelopment fairly,
increasing education and decent jobs instead of building jails? How about a county that has decent programs of physical education? How about thinking of health holistically?


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Too_much_government wrote on September 24, 2009 01:58 PM: The non-profit Cleveland Clinic pays Cosgrove $7.5M per year. That's right. Call it "the new charity". The Mooch Clinic should not be given free land so that they can pay their empire building CEO a fortune. Why not just give the land to Wynn for a new casino?

The Mooch Clinic probably accepts billions of dollars in federal money. As such, they should NOT be paying Cosgrove like a MLB All-Star. The public-charity sector is NOT supposed to be a place to get rich.


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Too_much_government wrote on September 24, 2009 01:32 PM: *** WARNING *** RJ operates under a JOA. Government censorship rules apply. *** WARNING ***


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Anna wrote on September 24, 2009 10:20 AM: If the Mayor gets this done, it will be his lasting legacy. This is would be a far better achievement than attract an NBA, NHL, NFL, and MLB team to the city combined.


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joe wrote on September 24, 2009 09:37 AM: I don't think most people realize the potential of bringing/expanding Cleveland Clinic here. This article also mentions the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. UPMC is one of the primary reasons unemployment in Pittsburgh is far lower than the national average. And it's the only place where I've received quality health care.

Please bring the Cleveland Clinic to Las Vegas in order to improve health care and job prospects.


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