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Today's Selection Of Opinions And Editorials
The Health-Care Sacrifice The Washington Post
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Statement By Merck & Co., Inc. Regarding FOSAMAX® (alendronate Sodium) And Rare Cases Of Osteonecrosis Of The Jaw
Merck is committed to putting patients first and providing accurate information regarding the efficacy, safety and tolerability of our medicines. Merck offers the following statement concerning the osteoporosis medication FOSAMAX® (alendronate sodium) and reports of jaw problems associated with delayed healing and infection of the jaw often following tooth extraction. The condition is known as osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ).
News of the day
Factories Urged To Put Safety First After Greater Manchester Company Ignores Rules For Eight Years
Factory owners in Greater Manchester are being urged to put the safety of their staff first after an aerospace engineering company regularly ignored health and safety rules for eight years.
Health Insurance

Payment Reform: A Trend In White House Thinking

White House health reformers have pressed over the last month for payment reforms that would reward doctors and hospitals for spending less and delivering higher quality care, rather than simply providing a higher volume of services. The Wall Street Journal reports that reexamining payment systems is a hot topic among administration officials in other disciplines, too: "President Barack Obama believes you get what you pay for--in business, in health care and in teaching. And in each of those spheres, he doesn"t think the way the U.S. pays professionals is designed to get what the nation really wants and needs." While Obama budget chief Peter Orszag leads the charge on changing physician payment, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has suggested a mandate to pay business executives based on the performance of their companies, an alternative to other proposals calling for executive salary caps. And Arne Duncan, the education secretary, has said standardized-test scores should factor into teacher"s compensation. These types of reforms could be a challenge. Especially in health care and education, critics argue, "quality measures remain crude and pay-for-performance schemes don"t work as intended." In business, the pay-for-performance concept is more familiar, though it has come with unintended consequences. In the 1980s and 90s, executives were increasingly paid in stock options as a way of reflecting the corporation"s performance under their steerage. But it lead them to make choices that would temporarily inflate stock prices so they could cash out, with little regard for long term effects (Wessel, 7/9). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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