Weekly Standard: The Great Unmentionable
Enlarge Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Dr. Niraj Desai orients a suture while he sews in a kidney to a recipient patient during a kidney transplant at Johns Hopkins Hospital on June 26 in Baltimore, Maryland. Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Dr. Niraj Desai orients a suture while he sews in a kidney to a recipient patient during a kidney transplant at Johns Hopkins Hospital on June 26 in Baltimore, Maryland. Read An Article About Federalizing Medicaid Read An Article About Who Suffers Most If States Don’t Expand Medicaid Coverage Eli Lehrer is president of R Street. In discussions of America’s high health care costs, surprisingly little attention is paid to salaries and wages. Yet the fact that medical jobs simply pay more than those in other sectors is beyond dispute. A physician practicing in a primary care setting, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, earned an average of just over $200,000 in 2010, while spec Read more text