Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sports betting draws G2E crowd

- By Bailey Schulz Las Vegas Review-journal

Early Monday morning, the halls of the Sands Expo and Convention Center echoed with chatter as attendees of the 18th annual Global Gaming Expo scurried off toward the first educationa­l sessions of the year.

After making their way through crowded hallways and scanning their entry badge with security, guests anxiously waited to hear industry experts’ take on the future of sports gaming.

When 9 a.m. rolled around and there were no longer chairs available in the session room, people began to line the back walls. Some stood more than an hour, eager to learn about the gaming industry’s biggest topic of the year.

“There’s a real electricit­y in the air around the sports betting topic,” said Korbi Carrison, G2E event director. “Each state is deciding whether or not sports betting is right for them. At G2E,

G2E

The hospital’s labor unit and nursery closed Oct. 1, despite a 2002 developmen­t agreement under which the city provided the land for the hospital for $1 in exchange for it providing a list of services, obstetrics included.

Since the closure, moms-to-be must now travel to deliver their babies in a hospital, either to St. George, Utah, about 40 miles northeast, or to a hospital in Las Vegas, 82 miles southwest.

Cook is one of several Mesquite residents who voiced concerns at a Sept. 11 City Council meeting, saying that the closure of the town’s labor and delivery unit would drive out young families and keep new ones from moving to a city where more than half of the residents are over 50, according to census data.

Divide between young and old

Theresa Woolridge-ofori, a Mesquite dentist and wife to one of two obstetrici­an-gynecologi­sts in the fast-growing town of 18,500, said that the closure had opened a divide between the town’s young and old.

“Young people in this community are sick of being disenfranc­hised when it comes to issues that concern us,” she told council members.

Though hospital officials discussed closing the unit in 2012, the city didn’t agree to a contract amendment authorizin­g the change, and the unit stayed open. But the disagreeme­nt boiled over in late August, when Mesa View’s new CEO Ned

Hill announced the closure, saying demand is “simply not there.”

According to the hospital, deliveries at Mesa View have decreased by 74 percent in the last decade, dwindling to 63 in 2017.

“Discontinu­ing elective deliveries will allow our hospital to continue building up the services most needed in our community,” Hill said, adding that the hospital hired five new practition­ers in other specialtie­s with the money saved from the closure.

The city is trying to force the hospital to reopen the unit.

In a complaint filed in District Court last month, it argued the hospital violated the 2002 agreement by closing the unit four years before the 20-year contract ended. The hospital argued that the contract was not enforceabl­e because it doesn’t reference a state law that governs developmen­t agreements.

District Court Judge Richard Scotti denied the city’s motion for a temporary restrainin­g order and a hearing for a preliminar­y injunction. Mesquite City Attorney Bob Sweetin said the city plans to file a separate motion for a preliminar­y injunction while the court decides whether Mesa View is bound by its existing contract.

If a woman is in labor and can’t travel to St. George or Las Vegas, she can still deliver at Mesa View’s emergency department. That’s where paramedics have been instructed to take patients, said fire Capt. Spencer Lewis. “It’s far better for the mother and baby to deliver in a clean, sterile environmen­t than moving down the road,” he said.

He acknowledg­ed that crews aren’t trained to check how much a woman is dilated.

“The only thing we check for is if the head is coming out,” he said, adding that while he doesn’t expect a significan­t increase in call volume, Mesquite’s first responders are on edge with the additional responsibi­lity.

‘A mom is going to die’

Dr. Joseph Adashek, a Las Vegas OB-GYN who specialize­s in high-risk pregnancie­s, said he worries that lack of access to specialize­d care could result in more complicati­ons for women with otherwise healthy pregnancie­s. Moreover, delivering in an ER increases risk for mothers and their newborns, he said, because ERS generally don’t have pain management tools, like epidural shots, or the skills and equipment to resuscitat­e a baby.

“The emergency room is a bad place to have a baby; it’s just not set up for it,” Adashek said. “Even for us (obstetrici­ans), when we go to deliver a baby in an emergency room, it’s much more difficult, and they don’t have the supplies. A mom is going to die, and until that happens enough no one is going to (have the) political will to change it. It’s inevitable if you have to go that far for health care.”

 ?? Caroline Brehman ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @carolinebr­ehman Attendees wait in line for the next panel at the Global Gaming Expo on Monday.
Caroline Brehman Las Vegas Review-journal @carolinebr­ehman Attendees wait in line for the next panel at the Global Gaming Expo on Monday.

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