Crain's Cleveland Business, December 11, 2023

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CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I DECEMBER 11, 2023

COMPETING BY COLLABORATING Northeast and Central Ohio have distinct differences, but their economic futures are inextricably linked. PAGE 24

Priced out, burned out and driven out Youth sports loses its way, and parents are pushing back By Joe Scalzo

Over a decade ago, when Joe Bogdan was an athletic director at tiny East Canton High School in Stark County, he agreed to hold two things. The first was a travel basketball tournament at his high school gym. The second was his nose while he was doing it. “I hated every second of it,” he said. The tournament was the King James Shooting Stars Classic, which was found-

ed by LeBron James’ high school coach, Dru Joyce, and boasted hundreds of teams across dozens of venues in Northeast Ohio. One of the teams featured a group of 12-year-olds who had flown from Orlando, Florida, to Cleveland Hopkins. After landing, they got a hotel in Independence, drove an hour south to East Canton and played an 8:30 p.m. game. They lost by 45. See BURNED OUT on Page 6

VOL. 44, NO. 45 l COPYRIGHT 2023 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Experts weigh role of AI in health care’s future From filling out forms to creating a treatment plan, professionals are eager to use new technologies By Paige Bennett

As interest grows around artificial intelligence, experts believe emerging technologies could lead to big changes in health care. Developments in AI could provide assistive tools to busy caregivers and allow for medicine to be tailored to a patient’s specific needs. Conversations around the potential of AI in health care have gained momentum in recent years, but the con-

cept has been around for some time. “Everything gets packaged as completely new, but, really, creating algorithms that do more consistent, better medicine has been with us for decades,” Dr. Paul Ford, who works in the Cleveland Clinic’s Department of Neurology. “It really has ramped up in the last five to 10 years, given our electronic medical record and the increasing abilities of computer hardware to process things faster for large data sets.” Dr. Daniel Spratt, chair of the Department of Radiation Oncology at UH Cleveland Medical Center, said that See HEALTH CARE on Page 34

NOTABLE NONPROFIT BOARD LEADERS

These honorees demonstrate a commitment to the public good that inspires and elevates. PAGE 11

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