Document:

EX-10.11

 

Exhibit 10.11

MERCK & CO., INC.

SPECIAL SEPARATION PROGRAM

FOR

“BRIDGED” EMPLOYEES

Eligible Employees: Employees of Merck & Co., Inc. who are not subject to a collective bargaining
agreement and:

(1) Who Experience a Separation From Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan) on or
between November 1, 2005 and December 31, 2008; and

(2) Who as of their last day of employment (Separation Date), are

	 	•	 	at least 49 years of age but not yet age 55 and have at least 9 years of Credited
Service; or
	 
	 	•	 	at least 55 years of age but not yet age 65* and have at least 9 years of Credited
Service but do not have 10 years of Credited Service; or
	 
	 	•	 	at least 64 years of age but not yet age 65* and have less than 9 years of Credited
Service

         
 * For those who are at least age 65 with at least 9 but less than 10 years of Credited
Service, see the brochure applicable to “Separated Retirement Eligible” Employees.

Effective Date: As of January 2, 2008

 

 

This document summarizes the benefits for which a “Bridge-Eligible Employee” may be eligible under
the Special Separation Program and other Merck employee benefit plans and programs. Unless
otherwise noted below, the terms and conditions of Merck’s employee benefit plans and programs
applicable on an employee’s termination of employment from Merck are as described in the applicable
sections of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification)
previously provided to you or provided to you with this Brochure, as such plans and programs (and
the applicable sections of the Merck Benefits Book) may be amended from time to time. (A copy of
the applicable sections of the Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material
modification) can be obtained on line at http://humres.merck.com/benefit/about_benefits_book.html
or www.merck.com/benefits or by calling the Merck Benefits Service Center at 1-800-666-3725).
However, to the extent that the terms below differ from those described in the applicable sections
of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification), this
communication constitutes a summary of material modifications and should be kept with that book.

“Bridge-Eligible Employees” are certain nonunionized Merck & Co., Inc. employees

(1) who experience a Separation From Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan)
on or between November 1, 2005 and December 31, 2008; and

(2) who as of their last day of employment with Merck (the “Separation Date”), are

	 	o	 	at least 49 years of age but not yet age 55 and have at least 9 years
of Credited Service; or
	 
	 	o	 	at least 55 years of age but not yet age 65 and have at least 9 years
of Credited Service but do not have 10 years of Credited Service; or
	 
	 	o	 	at least 64 years of age but not yet age 65 and have less than 9
years of Credited Service (as defined in the Retirement Plan).

Bridge-Eligible Employees are only those employees who are designated by Merck as “Bridge-Eligible
Employees.” “Bridge-Eligible Employees” do not include employees who terminate employment in any
way that does not constitute a Separation From Service as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan
as determined by Merck, including employees who resign for any reason. Benefits described in this
Brochure only apply to Bridge-Eligible Employees and do not apply to any other Merck employees.

If you have been designated as a Bridge-Eligible Employee, the Company will provide you with a
separation letter (the “Separation Letter”) that will describe the Special Separation Program
benefits for which you are eligible and will include a release of legal claims against the Company,
and may also include other terms, such as non-solicitation and non-competition provisions, as the
Company in its

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sole discretion decides to include. In order for you to retire under the Retirement Plan as of
your Separation Date and to receive the benefits under the Special Separation Program, you must
sign and return the Separation Letter by the date stated in the letter (the “Separation Letter
Return Date”) and not revoke the letter within the revocation period.

Bridge-Eligible Employees who sign, return and do not revoke the Separation Letter shall be treated
as retired under the Retirement Plan and referred to as “Bridged Employees.”

Advance Notice or Pay in Lieu of Notice

You will either receive advance notice of your Separation From Service, or, Pay in Lieu of Notice.
Pay in Lieu of Notice, which is not contingent upon your signing the Separation Letter, will be
paid to you if you are not provided advance notice as described in the Summary Plan Description for
the Separation Benefits Plan (the “Separation Plan SPD”) distributed with this Brochure. If the
Company is required under the Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification Act or any other
similar federal, state or local law to provide a notice period or pay in lieu of notice, such
required notice or pay shall be in lieu of, and not in addition to, any notice or Pay in Lieu of
Notice provided under the Separation Benefits Plan.

Special Separation Program

All other benefits under this Special Separation Program are contingent upon the Bridge-Eligible
Employee signing and not revoking the Separation Letter. They consist of:

	 	•	 	Separation Pay
	 
	 	•	 	Outplacement Services
	 
	 	•	 	A pro-rata portion of certain early retirement subsidies under the Retirement Plan
(“Pension Bridge”) and treatment as a retiree under the Retirement Plan
	 
	 	•	 	Medical and dental benefits

	 	O	 	For Bridge-Eligible Employees with at least 9 years of Credited
Service (as defined by the Retirement Plan) as of their Separation
Dates)—Treatment as a retiree for purposes of medical, dental benefits
	 
	 	O	 	For Bridge-Eligible Employees who have less than 9 years of Credited
Service as of their Separation Dates—Eligibility for continued medical and dental
benefits for a period

	 	•	 	Treatment as a retiree for purposes of life insurance benefits
	 
	 	•	 	Treatment as a retiree for purposes of unexercised stock options and restricted stock
units and performance stock units

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	 	•	 	Eligibility for a special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus for the performance year
in which his or her Separation Date occurs if his or her Separation Date occurs after June
30 and on or before December 31 of that performance year
	 
	 	•	 	Eligibility for extended use of the day care center

Separation Pay and Outplacement Benefits are described in the Separation Plan SPD distributed with
this Brochure.

This Brochure describes:

	 	•	 	the additional benefits offered under the Special Separation Program that are not
described in the Separation Plan SPD:

	 	•	 	Pension Bridge;
	 
	 	•	 	treatment as a retiree for purposes of medical, dental and life insurance benefits
(provided that, for retiree healthcare benefits, the Bridge-Eligible Employees would
have had at least 9 years of Credited Service (as defined by the Retirement Plan) as
of their Separation Dates);
	 
	 	•	 	treatment as a retiree for purposes of stock options, restricted stock units and
performance stock units;
	 
	 	•	 	eligibility for a special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus for the performance
year in which his or her Separation Date occurs and
	 
	 	•	 	eligibility for extended use of the day care center;

	 	•	 	the benefits for those Bridge-Eligible Employees who do not sign, or who sign and later
revoke, the Separation Letter; and
	 
	 	•	 	the terms and conditions of certain Merck benefit plans and programs as they apply to
any separated employee without regard to whether they sign the Separation Letter.

Retirement Plan — Pension Bridge

“Terminated Vested” – If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter

By definition, as of the Separation Date, Bridge-Eligible Employees are not eligible for early or
normal retirement under the terms of the Retirement Plan for Salaried Employees. So, on your
Separation Date, if you are not a Bridged Employee (one who has signed and not revoked the
Separation Letter) and you have at least 5 years of Vesting Service (as that term is defined in the
Retirement Plan), you will be a “terminated vested” participant in the Retirement Plan for all
purposes and will stop accruing additional Credited Service (as that term is defined in the
Retirement Plan). This means that your employment will have terminated after you are vested and
before you were eligible for early or normal retirement under the Retirement Plan (generally, at
least age 55 with at least 10 years of Credited Service, or at least age 65 without regard to years
of service).

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If you are less than 65 and your employment terminates before you have at least 5 years of Vesting
Service, you are not vested and have no entitlement under the Retirement Plan; you are not
considered “terminated vested.”

If you are a “terminated vested” participant, your benefits under the Retirement Plan must
begin no later than the first day of the month following age 65. However, you can start receiving
a reduced benefit on the first day of any month after you reach age 55. Your benefit will be
reduced to reflect early payment of your benefits. The early payment reduction for a “terminated
vested” participant is an “actuarial” reduction. That is, your life expectancy and certain other
actuarial assumptions are used in calculating the reduction amount for each year prior to age 65
that the benefits begin. You should expect this to reduce your benefits substantially because by
commencing your benefit early, you receive benefits earlier and for a longer period. A table
illustrating examples of actuarial reductions from the age 65 benefit and a more detailed
explanation of the benefits for “terminated vested” participants can be found in the Salaried
Retirement Plan section of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material
modification).

After you leave the Company, if you are entitled to a vested benefit from the Retirement Plan,
you’ll receive a statement that will tell you what your life income will be at age 65. This will
be sent to you within approximately one year from your Separation Date. If any portion of your
benefit is from a different plan, such as the Retirement Plan for Hourly Employees of Merck & Co.,
Inc., there is an offset which reduces the benefit from the Retirement Plan. The aggregate lump
sum benefit payable from two different plans generally differs slightly from a lump sum payable
from only one plan (especially if different interest rate methodologies apply).

Payments not Compensation for Retirement Plan. Any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay is not
compensation for Retirement Plan purposes. A bonus or the special payment, if any, in lieu of an
AIP/EIP bonus paid after your Separation Date is also not compensation for Retirement Plan
purposes.

Special Separation Program – Pension “Bridge” – If You Sign the Separation Letter

For Retirement Plan purposes, as a Bridged Employee (one who has signed and not revoked the
Separation Letter), you will be considered to have retired from active service with Merck on your
Separation Date and will be entitled to a pro-rata portion of your early retirement subsidies. For
those who are not yet 55, you will be considered to have a “deferred” pension on the terms
described below. A “deferred” pension benefit is payable no earlier than the first of the month
following the participant’s 55th birthday.

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Early Retirement Subsidy. Your benefit from the Retirement Plan will be based on the Credited
Service accrued as of the Separation Date and will be payable at age 65; however, you can begin to
receive your benefits on the first day of any month after you reach age 55. If you commence your
benefit at or after age 55 but before age 62, the benefit will still be reduced. The amount of the
reduction is less than the actuarial reduction that applies to “terminated vested” participants and
more than the reduction that applies to early retirees who are not Bridged Employees.

The Retirement Plan provides that the benefits for early retirees are reduced by 0.25% for each
month (i.e., 3% for each year) that they begin before age 62. Bridged Employees receive a pro-rata
portion (the “Pro-Rata Fraction) of the enhancement provided by the early retirement subsidies.
The Pro-Rata Fraction equals the percentage of the employee’s Credited Service on his/her
Separation Date divided by the Credited Service that employee would have had if employment had
continued until he/she was first eligible to be treated as an early retiree. For purposes of this
fraction, Credited Service is limited to 35 years for both Credited Service at separation and the
Credited Service had employment continued to his/her first day of eligibility for treatment as an
early retiree.

For example, assume an employee is 49 years old with 9 years of Credited Service on his Separation
Date. He would have been first eligible to be treated as an early retiree when he attained age 55,
when he would have had 16 years of Credited Service. The Pro-Rata Fraction in this example would
be 9/16.

As another example, assume a Bridged Employee is 57 with 9 years of Credited Service on her
Separation Date. This employee would have been first eligible to be treated as an early retiree
when she had 10 years of Credited Service, so the pro-rata portion would be 9/10.

To calculate the benefit that will be paid, the formula is

	 	•	 	Pro-Rata Fraction TIMES the participant’s accrued benefit as of the Separation Date
payable with early retirement subsidies
	 
	 	•	 	PLUS (1 MINUS the Pro-Rata Fraction) TIMES the participant’s accrued benefit at
Separation Date actuarially reduced for early commencement

Here’s an example of how this formula will work. Assume an employee is 52 years old at separation
with 23 years of Credited Service. His earliest retirement age will be 55, at which time he would
have had 26 years of Credited Service, so his Pro-Rata Fraction is 23/26, or 88.46%. Assume his
accrued benefit—that is, the age 65 annuity paid every month for the rest of his life—is $1,000.
If he receives his pension at age 55, as an early retiree he would receive $790. As a terminated
vested participant, he would receive $340.

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Under the formula, he would receive

	 	•	 	88.46% Times $790 equals $698.83 
	 
	 	Plus

(1-88.46% = 11.54%) Times $340 equals $39.24

Equals

$738.07 as an annuity, payable at age 55.

The $738.07 annuity value could be converted into any of the forms of benefit available under the
Retirement Plan.

Rule of 85 Transition Benefit. Bridged Employees who, if their employment with Merck had continued
would have qualified for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit within two years of their Separation
Date will receive the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit when benefits from the Retirement Plan begin.
In other words, this enhancement applies if on your Separation Date you are at least 53 years old,
and the sum of your age and Credited Service is at least 81. The Rule of 85 Transition Benefit
will be payable upon commencement of your pension benefits, even if the date of commencement of
pension benefits is earlier than the date you would otherwise have qualified for the Rule of 85
Transition Benefit, and is included in the early retirement subsidies that are subject to the
Pro-Rata Fraction described above.

The Rule of 85 Transition Benefit is fully described in the Salaried Retirement Plan section of the
current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification). In general, the
Rule of 85 was phased out in July of 1995. It had provided that an employee whose employment
terminated after age 55, when age and service equaled at least 85, would be eligible for an
unreduced age 65 benefit instead of the normal early retirement subsidy (i.e., a 3% per year
reduction for each year that benefit payments begin prior to age 62). The Rule of 85 Transition
Benefit preserved 100% of the Rule of 85 for any employee who was 50 or older in July of 1995, with
90% preserved for then 49 year old employees, 80% for then 48 year old employees, etc. No benefit
was preserved for employees then 40 or younger.

For example, assume a Bridged Employee was born June 30, 1951. On July 1, 1995, this employee was
44 so 40% of her Rule of 85 benefit was preserved. Assume further that her Separation Date is
January 1, 2006 (she’ll be 54 years and 6 months old) and that she then has 30 years of Credited
Service. If her employment had continued until she attained age 55, she would have been entitled
to the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit as of July 1, 2006 (her age and service as of that date would
have exceeded 85). This employee may begin to receive her benefits (including her Rule of 85
Transition Benefit, i.e., 40% of the Rule of 85 benefit) from the Retirement Plan on July 1, 2006,
the first day of the month after she reaches age 55. For this Bridged Employee, her “early
retirement subsidies” as described above that are subject to the Pro-Rata Fraction would include
the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit.

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On the other hand, assume instead that a Bridged Employee would be 52 on his Separation Date. No
matter how many years of Credited Service he had, he is not eligible for the Rule of 85 Transition
Benefit under the Special Separation Program because he would not have been entitled to the Rule of
85 Transition Benefit within two years of his Separation Date had he remained a Merck employee. In
other words, he would not have reached age 55 and had 85 points within 2 years of his Separation
Date had his employment continued.

Social Security Bridge Transition Benefit. Bridged Employees also will be eligible for the Social
Security Bridge Transition Benefit under the Special Separation Program. The Social Security
Bridge Transition Benefit is fully described in the Salaried Retirement Plan section of the current
Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification). In general, the Social
Security Bridge Transition Benefit reduces the offset for Social Security Benefits under the
Retirement Plan by providing a temporary monthly supplement prior to age 62. The benefit was
eliminated in July 1995 but was preserved for employees then at least age 50, with 90% preserved
for employees then 49, 80% for employees then 48, etc. The benefit was not preserved for employees
then 40 or younger. Because this benefit does not require any particular number of points, you may
be eligible for the Social Security Transition Benefit even if you are not eligible for the Rule of
85 Transition Benefit.

Death of a Bridged Employee. If you die after you sign the Separation Letter but before you begin
to receive your benefits from the Retirement Plan, your spouse (or estate in the case of any
unmarried participant) will receive an annuity or a lump sum. If you die before age 55, you will
be eligible for the Social Security Bridge Transition Benefit. If you were eligible for the Rule
of 85 Transition Benefit on your Separation Date, you will not be eligible for this benefit if you
die before you reach age 55. The Pro-Rata Fraction described above would be applied as described
above. The benefit is calculated as though you had elected a joint and 50% survivor annuity with
your spouse (if you’re unmarried, as though you had a spouse the same age as you) on the day before
you died. The lump sum is the actuarial equivalent of just the 50% survivor portion of the
benefit—that is, taking into account your death. The annuity or lump sum is payable only after
your spouse (or administrator of your estate) applies for the benefit. Bridged Employees under the
Special Separation Program will not be charged for the qualified pre-retirement spousal annuity
fully described in the Salaried Retirement Plan section of the current Merck Benefits Book (and
applicable summaries of material modification).

Other Information. Except as described here, you will be treated as a terminated vested
participant for Retirement Plan purposes. For example, you may not receive a “disability
retirement” as discussed in the Salaried Retirement Plan section of the current Merck Benefits Book
(and applicable summaries of material modification).

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The special provisions in the Retirement Plan regarding Bridged Employees are subject to certain
discrimination tests under tax laws. Our actuaries have reviewed data on a preliminary basis and
concluded that these special provisions satisfy those tests under most scenarios. However, if the
provisions in practice happen to fail the tests, the benefits described here will be made, to the
extent necessary, from Company assets outside the Retirement Plan. Benefits from the Retirement
Plan have tax advantages that payments outside it do not. You will be notified as soon as possible
if this provision affects you.

After you leave the Company, if you are entitled to a vested benefit from the Retirement Plan,
you’ll receive a statement that will tell you what your life income will be at age 65. This will
be sent to you within approximately one year from your Separation Date. If any portion of your
benefit is from a different plan, such as the Retirement Plan for Hourly Employees of Merck & Co.,
Inc., there is an offset which reduces the benefit from the Retirement Plan. The aggregate lump
sum benefit payable from two different plans generally differs slightly from a lump sum payable
from only one plan (especially if different interest rate methodologies apply).

Payments not Compensation for Retirement Plan. Any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay is not
compensation for Retirement Plan purposes. A bonus or the special payment, if any, in lieu of an
AIP/EIP bonus paid after your Separation Date is also not compensation for Retirement Plan
purposes.

Split Election. Bridged Employees whose pension benefits are payable in part from the Supplemental
Retirement Plan who wish to make an election with respect to their retirement plan benefits from
that plan may do so in accordance with procedures established to satisfy the American Jobs Creation
Act of 2004. You must contact the HR Service Center at 1-866-MRK-HR4U (1-866-675-4748) to request
the appropriate paperwork if you are eligible.

Medical (including Prescription Drug) and Dental

Medical (including Prescription Drug) and Dental – If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter

If you don’t sign the Separation Letter, your medical and dental coverage options in effect on your
Separation Date will continue under Merck’s medical and dental plans (as they may be amended from
time to time) until the end of the month following the calendar month in which your Separation Date
occurred. At the end of that period, you will be eligible to elect to continue your coverage in
accordance with COBRA for up to 18 months from your Separation Date. If you have no medical and/or
dental coverage under Merck’s plans on your Separation

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Date, you will not have medical and/or dental coverage, as applicable, after your Separation Date
nor will you be eligible to elect such coverage under COBRA.

Special Separation Program – Retiree Medical (including Prescription Drug) and Dental – If You Have
at least Nine Years of Credited Service as of Your Separation Date and You Sign the Separation
Letter

Under the Special Separation Program, if you have at least nine years of Credited Service on your
Separation Date and you sign (and do not revoke) the Separation Letter, you will be eligible to
participate in retiree medical and dental coverage under Merck’s plans (as they may be amended from
time to time) as of the first day of the month after your Separation Date (even if your Separation
Date is not the first day of a month). Your active employee coverage will continue until the end
of the month in which your Separation Date occurs. Your retiree healthcare benefits will commence
as of the first of the month following your Separation Date (“Retiree Healthcare Commencement
Date”).

You will be automatically enrolled in retiree dental under the comprehensive coverage option and in
retiree medical coverage under the same coverage option in which you were enrolled as an active
employee on the day before your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, provided that coverage option
is available to you as a retiree; if that medical coverage option is not available, you will be
automatically enrolled in the plan’s default option (currently the Merck PPO option if your address
is within the network coverage area, otherwise the Merck 80/20 Out of Area option). Coverage under
your retiree medical and dental coverage will also automatically continue for your eligible
dependents who were your covered dependents under the applicable plans on the day before your
Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date.

You are permitted to add eligible dependents or drop covered dependents and/or change medical
coverage options retroactive to the date your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date only if you
notify the Merck Benefits Service Center of such change(s) within 30 days after your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date. Thereafter, any permitted changes will only be made prospectively.

Note that only those eligible dependents who are your “Dependents of Record” as of your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date can be eligible for dependent coverage under your retiree healthcare
coverage. Be sure to register your eligible dependents as “Dependents of Record” with the Merck
Benefit Service Center within 30 days after your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date. If an
eligible dependent is not timely registered as your “Dependent of Record”, he/she will never be
eligible for dependent coverage under your Merck retiree healthcare coverage. Eligible dependents
who are your covered dependents on your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, are automatically
registered as Dependents of Record.

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Beginning in 2008 you can “opt-out” of retiree coverage, but note that your ability to re-enroll
for coverage is generally limited to annual open enrollment (with the following January 1 as the
re-enrollment effective date); mid-year enrollment is available only if you are covered under and
lose other coverage and you contact the Merck Benefit Service Center to re-enroll in Merck retiree
coverage within 30 days of the loss of your other coverage.

You must pay the applicable retiree premiums for retiree healthcare coverage beginning on your
Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date. You will receive an invoice from Fidelity that indicates the
premium due for your retiree coverage. Prior to 2008, if you fail to pay the premium required for
retiree medical and dental coverage in the time and manner specified on the invoice, your coverage
will be terminated and it will not be reinstated. Beginning in 2008, if you fail to timely pay the
required premium, you will be deemed to have opted out of coverage and your ability to re-enroll is
limited as described above. But note, if you want the flexibility to opt-out of Merck retiree
coverage starting in 2008, you must pay the required premiums for coverage through 2007.

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Bridged Employee whose
Separation Date is prior to January 1, 2008 (or who is notified prior to January 1, 2008 that
his/her Separation Date will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records as of his/her Separation Date; provided
however, that if such sum is less than 65, then the Bridged Employee is deemed to have
65 points; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule
applicable to the “Rule of 92” in effect on his/her Retiree Healthcare Commencement
Date, as the premium schedule may be amended from time to time.

For the “Rule of 92” premium schedule, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Bridged Employee whose
Separation Date is on or after January 1, 2008 (other than a Bridged Employee who is notified prior
to January 1, 2008 that his/her Separation Date will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records (from age 40 for those subject to the
“Rule of 88”; all adjusted service for those subject to the “Rule of 92”) as of
his/her Separation Date; provided however, if such sum is less than 65, then the
Bridged Employee is deemed to have 65 points; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule for
the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88”, as

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applicable, in effect on his/her Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, as the premium
schedule may be amended from time to time.

To determine whether the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88” applies to you and to see the
premiums applicable to those schedules, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

Continuation of retiree medical and dental coverages for Bridged Employees under the Special
Separation Program is subject to the same early forfeiture provisions applicable to separated
employees as described in the Separation Plan SPD. The forfeiture provisions will apply for the
Separation Pay Period only.

Special Separation Program – If You Are 64 and Would Have Less than 9 Years of Credited Service as
of Your Separation Date and You Sign the Separation Letter

If, you (a) are 64 and have less than nine years of Credited Service on your Separation Date and
(b) sign the Separation Letter, then, under the Special Separation Program, you will be eligible
for continued medical and dental coverage (not retiree coverage) under Merck’s medical and dental
plans (as they may be amended from time to time) for the Separation Pay Period as more fully
described in the Separation Plan SPD. If the Separation Pay Period is less than six months, you
may continue medical and dental coverage for six months. Contributions for medical and dental
coverage will be deducted from your Separation Pay. The contributions will be the same as the
contributions for active employees, as they may change from time to time. At the end of the
Separation Pay Period or, if the Separation Pay Period is less than 6 months, then at the end of
the 6-month period during which medical and dental coverages are provided, you may elect to
continue your coverage in accordance with COBRA for up to an additional 18 months. If you have no
medical and/or dental coverage on your Separation Date, you will not have such coverage during the
Separation Pay Period (or the 6-month period, if applicable) nor will you be eligible to elect such
coverage under COBRA.

Continuation of medical and dental coverages under the Special Separation Program for
Bridge-Eligible Employees under this paragraph is subject to the same early forfeiture provisions
applicable to separated employees as described in the Separation Plan SPD.

Life Insurance

Life Insurance – If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter

If you do not sign the Separation Letter, your employee group term life, dependent life, and
survivor income protection will continue for 31 days after your

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Separation Date. After this 31-day period you may elect to continue these coverages at the level
in effect on your Separation Date under Merck’s Life Insurance Plan (as it may be amended from time
to time). You may continue these coverages at your cost for up to the earlier of 30 months from
your Separation Date or age 65. If you wish to continue your survivor income protection and/or
your dependent life coverage, you must continue your employee group term life (basic and optional).
To continue your life insurance coverage(s) you must submit the applicable form to the Merck
Benefits Service Center (1-800-666-3725) within 31 days after your Separation Letter Return Date
and you must pay the applicable premium in the time and manner specified by Merck. If you fail to
pay the premium in the time and manner specified by Merck, your coverage(s) will be terminated and
they will not be reinstated. If you are interested in continuing your coverage(s), contact The
Merck Benefits Service Center (1-800-666-3725) for more information and the applicable form.

Your accidental death and dismemberment coverage ends on your Separation Date.

A full month’s premium may be deducted from your paycheck for the month in which your Separation
Date occurs.

Special Separation Program — Life Insurance – If You Sign the Separation Letter

Under the Special Separation Program, if you sign the Separation Letter, you will be considered a
retiree for life insurance purposes under Merck’s Life Insurance Plan (as it may be amended from
time to time) as of your Separation Date, with retiree coverage to begin on the first day of the
month after your Separation Date. As a retiree, your employee group term life insurance coverage
equal to 1x base pay (or 2x base pay if you have “Old Format”) will continue at no cost to you.
This amount will reduce by 25% of the amount of your coverage starting on the first day of the
month following your Separation Date, and by an equal dollar amount on the anniversary of that
date, until the third anniversary of that date, when no balance remains. You have the right to
convert the amount of reduction to an individual policy. See the Life Insurance Plan section of
the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification) for information
on conversion. As a retiree, you may continue your employee group term life insurance in excess of
1x base pay (2x if you are “Old Format”), dependent life and/or survivor income protection
(collectively “Optional Coverages”) in effect on your Separation Date until age 65 by paying the
applicable premiums in the time and manner required by Merck. If you fail to pay the premium
required to continue your coverage in the time and manner specified by Merck, your coverage(s) will
be terminated and they will not be reinstated.

Continuation of basic life insurance as a retiree under the Special Separation Program is subject
to the same early forfeiture provisions applicable to separated

13

 

employees as described in the Separation Plan SPD. If your basic life insurance ends as a result of
forfeiture, your Optional Coverages will also cease. See the life insurance section of the Merck
Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification) for description of conversion
rights.

Your accidental death and dismemberment coverage ends on your Separation Date.

The chart below is provided for your convenience to compare the medical, dental and life insurance
benefits offered under the Special Separation Program to the normal plan provisions.

	 	 	 	 	 
	 	 	Regular Plan	 	Special Separation
	 	 	Provisions	 	Program
	 
	Medical, Dental, 

Prescription Drug

	 	Benefits continue to
the end of the month
following the month in
which your Separation
Date occurs; eligible
for COBRA afterward
	 	You will be treated
as a retiree with
applicable
contributions if you
would have at least
9 years of credited
service as of your
Separation Date

If you have less
than 9 years of
credited service as
of your Separation
Date, then benefits
continue to the end
of the month in
which the Separation
Pay Period ends (or
a minimum of 6
months);
contributions are
deducted from
Separation Pay;
thereafter eligible
for COBRA
	 
	 	 	 	 
	Basic Employee Term
Life Insurance (new
format-maximum 1x
base pay; if Old
Format -2x base pay)

	 	Coverage at level in
effect on Separation
Date continues for 31
days; you may elect to
continue coverage for
up to 30 months (but
not beyond age 65) from
Separation Date at your
cost
	 	Treated as a retiree
	 
	 	 	 	 
	Optional Employee 

Group Term Life, 

Dependent Life, 

Survivor Income

	 	Coverage at level in
effect on Separation
Date continues for 31
days; you may elect to
continue coverage for
up to 30 months (but
not beyond age 65) from
Separation Date at your
cost	 	Treated as a retiree
— You can continue
coverage at your
cost up to age 65
	 
	 	 	 	 
	AD&D

	 	No coverage
	 	No coverage
	 
	 	 	 	 

Stock Options, Restricted Stock Units and Performance Stock Units

Only employees may receive incentives under Merck’s incentive stock plans, including stock options,
restricted stock units (“RSUs”) or performance stock units (“PSUs”); therefore, you will not be
eligible to receive any grants after your Separation Date.

14

 

Outstanding Stock Options, RSUs and PSUs

If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter – “Separated” for Purposes of Stock Options, RSUs and PSUs

Under Merck’s incentive stock plans, stock options, RSUs and PSUs held by a U.S. employee whose
employment ends are treated under the provisions of the grants applicable to retirement only if the
employee is considered a retiree under the Retirement Plan. Bridge-Eligible Employees who do not
sign the Separation Letter (or who revoke the Separation Letter) are not considered retirees under
the Retirement Plan. Therefore, if you do not sign the Separation Letter (or you revoke the
Separation Letter), the separation provisions (not the retirement provisions) applicable to stock
options, RSUs and PSUs will apply to any outstanding incentives you hold on your Separation Date.
The separation provisions may differ based on the grants. IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO FAMILIARIZE
YOURSELF WITH THE TERMS OF INDIVIDUAL GRANTS.

Stock
Options (separation terms)

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made prior to 2001, the separation terms
are:

Vested options will expire upon the earlier of (i) the day before the one-year anniversary
of your Separation Date or (ii) the original 10-year expiration date.

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made during 2001 and thereafter, the
separation terms are:

All outstanding annual and quarterly grants will vest on the Separation Date. You will
then have two years to exercise them; they will expire on the day before the second
anniversary of your Separation Date.

Key R&D, MRL and MMD new hire stock option grants, and other stock option grants may have different
terms. See the term sheets applicable to such stock option grants.

If you are treated as separated, and later rehired, stock options that are unexercised and
outstanding on your rehire date will be reinstated to active status as if your employment had not
been interrupted.

RSUs (separation terms)

If you are treated as separated, a pro rata portion of your annual grants of restricted stock
units, if any, generally will vest and become distributable soon after your Separation Date. See
the term sheets applicable to RSUs granted to you, if any.

15

 

PSUs (separation terms)

If you are treated as separated, a pro rata portion of your annual grant of performance share
units, if any, will be payable when the distribution, if any, with respect to the applicable
performance year is made to active employees. See the term sheets applicable to PSUs granted to
you, if any.

If you have any question about your stock options, restricted stock units or performance stock
units, you can call The HR Service Center at 1-866-MRK-HR4U (1-866-675-4748).

Special Separation Program – If You Sign the Separation Letter – “Retired” for Purposes of Stock
Options, RSUs and PSUs

Under Merck’s incentive stock plans, stock options, RSUs and PSUs held by a U.S. employee whose
employment ends are treated under the provisions of the grants applicable to retirement only if the
employee is considered a retiree under the Retirement Plan. If you sign and do not revoke the
Separation Letter you are considered a retiree under the Retirement Plan. Therefore, if you sign
and do not revoke the Separation Letter, the retirement provisions (not the separation provisions)
applicable to stock options, RSUs and PSUs will apply to any outstanding incentive you hold on your
Separation Date. The retirement provisions may differ based on the grants. IT IS YOUR
RESPONSIBILITY TO FAMILIARIZE YOURSELF WITH THE TERMS OF INDIVIDUAL GRANTS.

Stock
Options (retirement terms)

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made prior to 2001, the retirement
provisions are:

Vested options: May be exercised until the earlier of (i) the day before the 5th
anniversary of your Separation Date (considered your “retirement date”) or (ii) the
original expiration date.

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made during 2001 and thereafter, the
retirement provisions are:

Unvested options will vest on the original vesting date and then be exercisable for the
full term of the option, expiring on the original expiration date.

Key R&D, MRL and MMD new hire stock option grants, and other stock option grants may have different
terms. See the term sheets applicable to such stock option grants.

16

 

If you are treated as retired, and later rehired, stock options that are unexercised and
outstanding on your rehire date will continue under the retirement terms.

RSUs (retirement terms)

If you are treated as retired, your annual grants of restricted stock units, if any, generally will
vest and become distributable as if your employment with Merck had continued. See the term sheets
applicable to RSUs granted to you, if any.

PSUs (retirement terms)

If you are treated as retired, a pro rata portion of your annual grant of performance share units
that were granted to you at least 6 months prior to your Separation Date, if any, will be payable
when the distribution, if any, with respect to the applicable performance year is made to active
employees. Performance share units, if any, granted to you within 6 months of your Separation Date
will lapse on your Separation Date. See the term sheets applicable to PSUs granted to you, if any.

If you have any question about your stock options, RSUs or PSUs, call the HR Service Center at
1-866-MRK-HR4U (1-866-675-4748).

Annual Incentive Program/Executive Incentive Program (“AIP/EIP”)—

As described in more detail below, payment of bonuses, or a special payment in lieu of a bonus,
depends on when a Bridged Employee’s Separation Date occurs during a performance year. Actual
AIP/EIP bonuses with respect to the performance year immediately preceding the Bridged Employee’s
Separation Date may be paid to employees whose employment terminates between January 1 and the time
AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for that year to other employees. No AIP/EIP or special payment in lieu
of a bonus with respect to the performance year in which the Separation Date occurs is payable for
any employee separated after AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year and on or before June 30. A
special payment in lieu of a bonus is payable under this program with respect to the performance
year in which the Separation Date occurs only for employees whose Separation Dates occur on or
after July 1 and on or before December 31 of that performance year.

If Your Separation Date occurs between January 1 and the time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year

If your Separation Date occurs on or after January 1 and the day AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other
Merck employees, you will be eligible for consideration for an AIP/EIP bonus with respect to the
prior complete performance year on the same terms and conditions as other Merck employees.
Provided you are in a class of employees eligible for an AIP/EIP, your AIP/EIP bonus, if any, will
be

17

 

paid to you at the same time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other Merck employees or will be deferred
in accordance with your applicable deferral election for that AIP/EIP performance year.
Eligibility for consideration for AIP/EIP bonus is not contingent upon your signing the Separation
Letter. You will not be eligible for any AIP/EIP or payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP for the
performance year in which your Separation Date occurs.

If Your Separation Date occurs between the time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year and June 30

If your Separation Date occurs after AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other Merck employees and on or
before June 30, you will not be eligible for consideration for an AIP/EIP bonus or the special in
lieu of bonus payment described below whether or not you sign the Separation Letter.

If Your Separation Date occurs after June 30 and on or before December 31

A special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP with respect to the performance year in which your
Separation Date occurs may be paid only if you sign and do not revoke the Separation Letter. The
special payment, if any, will be calculated based on the bonus paid to you under the Annual
Incentive Program/Executive Incentive Program with respect to the prior complete performance year
and the number of months you worked in the current performance year and is subject to adjustment by
the Company in its sole discretion based on a variety of factors, including but not limited to your
documented poor or extraordinary performance in the current performance year. If you received no
AIP/EIP in the prior performance year and you do not have documented poor performance for the prior
or current performance year, the Company may base your special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus,
if any, on the minimum of the Company’s bonus range for your position. If your AIP/EIP for the
prior performance year was prorated (e.g., due to a leave of absence, new hire status,
promotion/demotion, change in full-time/part-time status, etc.), the Company may, in its
discretion, calculate your special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus, if any, by annualizing the
actual AIP/EIP paid for the prior performance year. If you receive a special payment in lieu of an
AIP/EIP bonus, it will be paid to you (less applicable withholding) as soon as administratively
feasible following your Separation Date. Your deferral election applicable to the AIP/EIP for the
current performance year if any, will not apply to any special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus.

Merck On-Site Day Care Centers

If your child is enrolled in a Merck on-site day care center, the child can remain enrolled at the
center until the Separation Letter Return Date. If you sign the Separation Letter and your child
is in an infant, toddler or preschool room as of your Separation Date, he/she may continue at the
day care center until the third month anniversary of your Separation Date; a child in kindergarten
as of your

18

 

Separation Date may continue until the end of the calendar week in which kindergarten graduation
occurs; provided that continued enrollment is subject to your continuing to abide by the rules and
regulations of the day care center and the terms of the Separation Letter. Continuation for the
first three months shall be at the regular tuition rate. For kindergarten children continuing
after the first three months, there may be an additional charge.

* * *

The following describes the terms and conditions of certain Merck benefit plans and programs as
they apply to employees whose employment with Merck terminates for any reason. For additional
information, see the applicable sections of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable
summaries of material modification).

Dependent Care Reimbursement Account

Your participation in the Dependent Care Reimbursement Account (“DCRA”) ends on your Separation
Date. Eligible expenses incurred throughout the calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs
(even after Merck employment ends) can be reimbursed but only up to the amount actually contributed
to the account. Claims for those expenses must be submitted to Aetna by April 15th of
the year following the year in which your Separation Date occurs. Amounts remaining in the account
after all eligible expenses have been paid will be forfeited.

Financial Engines

Your eligibility to use the Financial Engines financial planning tool will end on your Separation
Date.

Financial Planning

If you elected Financial Planning, you will continue in this benefit through the remainder of the
calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs. Your remaining cost for this benefit will be
deducted from your final pay check, or, if necessary, from any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation
Pay paid pursuant to the Separation Benefits Plan. Your Financial Planning election is irrevocable
and cannot be changed.

19

 

Flexible Benefits Program

The Flexible Benefits Program consists of the following Merck plans and programs: medical, dental,
vision, health care and dependent care reimbursement accounts, financial planning, life insurance
(including basic and optional term life, dependent term life, survivor income and accidental death
and dismemberment), long term care and long term disability. Your participation in these plans
ends as described elsewhere in this communication. However, a full month of contribution/premium
for your coverage under these plans in effect on your Separation Date may be deducted from your
paycheck for the month in which your Separation Date occurs.

Health Care Reimbursement Account

Your participation in the Health Care Reimbursement Account (“HCRA”) ends on your Separation Date,
unless you elect to continue to participate in accordance with COBRA for the remainder of the
calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs. If you elect to continue participation in HCRA
under COBRA, you must make your required contributions on an after-tax basis. Eligible expenses
incurred while you participate in HCRA during the calendar year in which your Separation Date
occurs can be reimbursed up to your entire elected amount. Claims incurred after your
participation in HCRA ends cannot be reimbursed, no matter how much money is left in the account.
Claims for expenses incurred during the calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs and
while you are a participant in HCRA must be submitted to Aetna by April 15 of the year following
the year in which your Separation Date occurs. Amounts remaining in the account after all eligible
expenses have been paid will be forfeited.

Long Term Care

If you elected coverage under Merck’s Long Term Care Plan for you (or your spouse or domestic
partner), that coverage will end on your Separation Date. However, if you want to continue
coverage without interruption, you must contact CNA (the insurer) and pay your first quarterly
premium to CNA within 31 days after the last day of the month in which your Separation Date occurs.
For more information (and to request the necessary forms) contact CNA directly at 1-800-528-4582.

Long Term Disability

Your participation in the Long Term Disability Plan will end on the last day of the month in which
your Separation Date occurs. In other words, you must have satisfied the 26-week eligibility
period and filed an application for benefits by the end of the month that includes your Separation
Date to be eligible for LTD benefits. If you are disabled and receiving income replacement
benefits under the Long Term Disability Plan on your Separation Date, those benefits will

20

 

continue in accordance with the terms of the Long Term Disability Plan. However, Pay in Lieu of
Notice and Separation Pay paid by the Company under the Special Separation Program will act as an
offset from benefits payable under the Long Term Disability Plan (meaning the LTD benefits will be
reduced by the Pay in Lieu of Notice and Separation Pay.)

Savings Plan

Any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay you receive under the Special Separation Program is not
Base Pay and may not be contributed to the Savings Plan. A pro-rata deduction will be made to the
Savings Plan based on the percentage of your monthly base pay you receive for the month in which
your Separation Date occurs. If you have a plan loan and do not repay it within 45 days of your
Separation Date, the loan will be declared in default and reported as a taxable distribution to the
Internal Revenue Service.

You generally may receive a final distribution from the Savings Plan at any time after your
Separation Date. However, if your account balance is $5,000 or less, your account balance
automatically will be distributed to you soon after your Separation Date. If, upon reaching age 65,
you have not previously elected to receive your benefits, your account balance will be distributed
to you without regard to its amount. Review the information in the Salaried Savings Plan section
of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification) for
additional information on Receiving a Final Distribution.

Short Term Disability

Subject to applicable state law, your participation in the Short Term Disability Plan ends on your
Separation Date. If you are disabled and are receiving income replacement benefits under the Short
Term Disability Plan on your Separation Date, those benefits will continue in accordance with the
terms of the plan. However, subject to state law, Pay in Lieu of Notice and Separation Pay paid by
the Company under the Special Separation Program will act as an offset from benefits payable under
the Short Term Disability Plan (meaning the STD benefits will be reduced by the Pay in Lieu of
Notice and Separation Pay). Where state law does not permit such offsets to be made to STD
benefits, STD benefits will instead act as an offset from Pay in Lieu of Notice and/or Separation
Pay paid (or payable) by the Company under the Special Separation Program (meaning Pay in Lieu of
Notice and/or Separation Pay will be reduced by the STD benefits).

Travel Accident

Your coverage under the Travel Accident Insurance Plan ends on your Separation Date.

21

 

Vacation Pay

You will be paid for any amount of vacation that you have accrued but not used as of your
Separation Date. Conversely, you must reimburse Merck for any vacation you used prior to your
Separation Date that you had not earned as of your Separation Date. Any such amounts to be
reimbursed may be deducted from any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay paid pursuant to the
Separation Benefits Plan.

Vision

Coverage under the Vision Plan ends on the last day of the month in which your Separation Date
occurs. You will be given the opportunity to continue this benefit in accordance with COBRA for up
to 18 months from your Separation Date by paying the required premiums.

* * *

The Special Separation Program described here currently is scheduled to be in effect for
Separations From Service that occur from November 1, 2005 through December 31, 2008. Merck retains
the right (to the extent permitted by law) to amend or terminate the Special Separation Program and
any benefit or plan described in this brochure (or otherwise) at any time. However, following a
change in control of Merck (as defined in the Change in Control Separation Benefits Plan), certain
limitations apply to Merck’s ability to amend or terminate this and other benefit plans. In
addition, an employee whose employment is terminated without cause within two years following a
change in control will also be entitled to receive the retirement bridge as provided in the Change
in Control Separation Benefits Plan.

While it has no current intention to do so, Merck also may extend, decrease or enhance, the Special
Separation Program in the future. If you sign and return the Separation Letter by the Separation
Letter Return Date, any later amendment or termination will not decrease or increase the amount of
Separation Pay you are eligible to receive under the Special Separation Program.

Notwithstanding anything in the Special Separation Program to the contrary, benefits under the
Program that are subject to Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, will be
adjusted to avoid the excise tax under Section 409A. Merck will take any and all steps it
determines are necessary, in its sole and absolute discretion, to adjust benefits under the Special
Separation Program to avoid the excise tax

22

 

under Section 409A, including but not limited to, reducing or eliminating benefits, changing the
time or form of payment of benefits, etc.

Payments generally may not be made on account of separation from service for six months following
the termination of employment of a “Specified Employee” as defined in Prop. Treas. Reg. Sec.
1.409A-1(i) or any successor thereto, which in general includes the top 50 employees of a company
ranked by compensation. Notwithstanding anything contained in the Special Separation Program to
the contrary, if a Covered Employee is a “Specified Employee” on his or her Separation Date, to the
extent required by Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, no payments will
be made to him or her prior to the first day of the sixth month following termination of
employment. Instead, amounts that would otherwise have been payable will be accumulated and paid,
without interest, as soon as administratively feasible following such six-month period.

23

 

Glossary of Definitions

As used in this document, the following terms have the following meanings.

“Bridge-Eligible Employees” are employees of Merck & Co., Inc. who are not subject to a collective
bargaining agreement and

(1) who experience a Separation From Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan)
on or between November 1, 2005 and December 31, 2008; and

(2) who as of their last day of employment with Merck (the “Separation Date”), are

	 	O	 	at least 49 years of age but not yet age 55 and have at least
9 years of Credited Service; or
	 
	 	O	 	at least 55 years of age but not yet age 65 and have at least
9 years of Credited Service but do not have 10 years of Credited Service; or
	 
	 	O	 	at least 64 years of age but not yet age 65 and have less
than 9 years of Credited Service

Bridge-Eligible Employees are only those employees who are designated by Merck as “Bridge-Eligible
Employees.” This Brochure only applies to Bridge-Eligible Employees.

“Bridged Employees” are those Bridge-Eligible Employees who sign and do not revoke the Separation
Letter. Bridged Employees are considered retired under the Retirement Plan. “Bridged Employees”
do not include employees who terminate employment in any way that does not constitute separation as
determined by Merck, including employees who resign for any reason.

“Company” or “Merck” means Merck & Co., Inc.

“Credited Service” is as defined in the Retirement Plan.

“Retirement Plan” means the Retirement Plan for Salaried Employees of Merck & Co., Inc.

“Separation Benefits Plan” means the Merck & Co., Inc. Separation Benefits Plan for Nonunion
Employees

“Separation Date” means a Bridge-Eligible Employee’s last day of employment with Merck.

“Separation Letter” means the Company-provided letter that will describe the Special Separation
Program benefits and include a release of claims against the Company and may include such other
terms such as non-solicitation and non-competition provisions, as the Company determines.

24

 

“Separation Letter Return Date” is the date stated in the Separation Letter by which
Bridge-Eligible Employees must sign and return it to the Company. If they sign and return and do
not revoke the Separation Letter, they become Bridged Employees.

“Separation Pay Period” is the number of full or partial work weeks for which a Bridged Employee is
being paid Separation Pay.

“Special Separation Program” means the separation benefits that Bridged Employees receive if they
sign and do not revoke the Separation Letter.

25EX-10.12

 

Exhibit 10.12

MERCK & CO., INC.

SPECIAL SEPARATION PROGRAM

FOR

“SEPARATED RETIREMENT ELIGIBLE” EMPLOYEES

Eligible Employees: Employees of Merck & Co., Inc. who are not subject to a collective bargaining

agreement and:

(1) who experience a Separation From Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan) on or
between November 1, 2005 and December 31, 2008; and

(2) who on the Separation Date are

	•	 	at least age 55 with at least 10 years of Credited Service; or
	 
	•	 	at least age 65

Effective Date: As of January 2, 2008

 

 

This document summarizes the benefits for which a “Separated Retirement Eligible Employee” may be
eligible under the Special Separation Program and other Merck employee benefit plans and programs.
Unless otherwise noted below, the terms and conditions of Merck’s employee benefit plans and
programs applicable on an employee’s termination of employment from Merck are as described in the
applicable sections of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material
modification) previously provided to you or provided to you with this Brochure, as such plans and
programs (and the applicable sections of the Merck Benefits Book) may be amended from time to time.
(A copy of the applicable sections of the Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of
material modification) can be obtained on line at
http://humres.merck.com/benefit/about_benefits_book.html or www.merck.com/benefits  or by calling
the Merck Benefits Service Center at 1-800-666-3725). However, to the extent that the terms below
differ from those described in the applicable sections of the current Merck Benefits Book (and
applicable summaries of material modification), this communication constitutes a summary of
material modifications and should be kept with that book.

“Separated Retirement Eligible Employees” are certain nonunionized Merck & Co., Inc. employees

(1) who experience a Separation From Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan) on or
between November 1, 2005 and December 31, 2008; and

(2) who as of their last day of employment with Merck (the “Separation Date”), are

	 	•	 	at least age 55 and have at least 10 years of Credited Service (as defined in the
Retirement Plan); or
	 
	 	•	 	at least age 65.

Separated Retirement Eligible Employees are only those employees who are designated by Merck as
“Separated Retirement Eligible Employees.” “Separated Retirement Eligible Employees” do not
include employees who terminate employment in any way that does not constitute a Separation From
Service (as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan) as determined by Merck, including employees
who resign for any reason. Benefits described in this Brochure only apply to Separated Retirement
Eligible Employees and do not apply to any other Merck employees.

If you have been designated as a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee, the Company will provide
you with a separation letter (the “Separation Letter”) that will describe the Special Separation
Program benefits for which you are eligible and will include a release of legal claims against the
Company, and may also include other terms, such as non-solicitation and non-competition provisions,
as the Company in its sole discretion decides to include. In order to receive the benefits under
the Special Separation Program, you must sign and return the Separation Letter by the date stated
in the letter (the “Separation Letter Return Date”) and not revoke the letter within the revocation
period.

2

 

Advance Notice or Pay in Lieu of Notice

You will either receive advance notice of your Separation From Service, or, Pay in Lieu of Notice.
Pay in Lieu of Notice, which is not contingent upon your signing the Separation Letter, will be
paid to you if you are not provided advance notice as described in the Summary Plan Description for
the Separation Benefits Plan (the “Separation Plan SPD”) distributed with this Brochure. If the
Company is required under the Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification Act or any other
similar federal, state or local law to provide a notice period or pay in lieu of notice, such
required notice or pay shall be in lieu of, and not in addition to, any notice or Pay in Lieu of
Notice provided under the Separation Benefits Plan.

Special Separation Program

All other benefits under this Special Separation Program are contingent upon the Separated
Retirement Eligible Employee signing and not revoking the Separation Letter. They consist of:

	 	•	 	Separation Pay
	 
	 	•	 	Outplacement Services
	 
	 	•	 	Eligibility for continued medical and dental benefits (for employees not otherwise
eligible for retiree medical and dental benefits)
	 
	 	•	 	Rule of 85 Transition Benefit under the Retirement Plan (for those who would have
attained it within two years of their Separation Dates)
	 
	 	•	 	Eligibility for a special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus for the performance
year in which his or her Separation Date occurs if his or her Separation Date occurs
on or after June 30 and on or before December 31 of that performance year
	 
	 	•	 	Eligibility for extended use of the day care center

Separation Pay and Outplacement Benefits are described in the Separation Plan SPD distributed with
this Brochure.

3

 

This Brochure describes:

	•	 	additional benefits offered under the Special Separation Program that are not described in the
Separation Plan SPD:

	 	O	 	eligibility for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit under the Retirement Plan
	 
	 	O	 	eligibility for continued medical and dental benefits for employees who are
not otherwise eligible for retiree medical and dental benefits; and
	 
	 	O	 	eligibility for extended use of the day care center, if applicable.

	•	 	benefits for those Separated Retirement Eligible Employees who do not sign, or who sign and later revoke, the
Separation Letter; and
	 
	•	 	terms and conditions of certain Merck benefit plans and programs as they apply to any separated employee without regard
to whether they sign the Separation Letter.

Retirement Plan – Rule of 85 Transition Benefit

If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter

You are eligible to retire under the terms of the Retirement Plan. As a Separated Retirement
Eligible Employee, you will be considered to have retired from active service for Retirement Plan
purposes on your Separation Date (even if the Separation Date is not the first day of a month).
Your benefit from the Retirement Plan will be based on the Credited Service accrued as of your
Separation Date and will be payable on the first day of the month following age 65 (or, if you are
at least 65 on your Separation Date, on the first day of the month following your Separation Date).
However, you can begin to receive your benefits on the first day of any month after you reach age
55. If you commence your benefit at or after age 55 but before age 62, the benefit will be
reduced. This reduction reflects that payments are made earlier and for a longer period of time.
The reduction for “retirees” is 0.25% for each month (i.e., 3% for each year that benefit payments
begin before age 62). The reduction is much less than the actuarial reduction that applies to
“terminated vested” participants. You will not receive the “Rule of 85 Transition Benefit” unless
you are eligible for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit as described below.

Death. If you die before you begin to receive your benefits from the Retirement Plan, your spouse
(or estate in the case of any unmarried participant) will receive an annuity or a lump sum. The
lump sum, according to plan factors in effect from time to time, is based on your age 65 accrued
benefit, reduced .25% per month before age 62 that your death occurs. Then the benefit is
calculated as though you had elected a joint and 50% survivor annuity with your spouse (if you’re
unmarried, as though you had a spouse the same age as you) on the day before you died. The lump
sum is the actuarial equivalent of just the 50% survivor portion of the benefit—that is, taking
into account your death. The annuity or lump sum is payable only after your spouse (or
administrator of your estate) applies for the benefit.

4

 

Payments not Compensation for Retirement Plan. Any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay is not
compensation for Retirement Plan purposes. A bonus or the special payment, if any, in lieu of an
AIP/EIP bonus paid after your Separation Date is also not compensation for Retirement Plan
purposes.

If any portion of your benefit is from a different plan, such as the Retirement Plan for Hourly
Employees of Merck & Co., Inc., there is an offset which reduces the benefit from the Retirement
Plan. The aggregate lump sum benefit payable from two different plans generally differs slightly
from a lump sum payable from only one plan (especially if different interest rate methodologies
apply).

Special Separation Program – Rule of 85 Transition Benefit – If You Sign the Separation Letter

As described above in the paragraph “If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter,” you are eligible to
retire under the terms of the Retirement Plan. Under the Special Separation Program, if you would
have qualified for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit within two years of your Separation Date, the
Rule of 85 Transition Benefit will be paid to you under special provisions under the Retirement
Plan. The Rule of 85 Transition Benefit will be payable upon commencement of your pension
benefits, even if the date of commencement of pension benefits is earlier than the date you would
otherwise have qualified for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit.

The Rule of 85 Transition Benefit is fully described in the Salaried Retirement Plan section of the
current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification). In general, the
Rule of 85 was phased out in July of 1995. It had provided that an employee whose employment
terminated after age 55, and whose age and service equaled at least 85, would be eligible for an
unreduced age 65 benefit instead of the normal early retirement subsidy (i.e., a 3% per year
reduction for every year the benefit begins prior to age 62). The Rule of 85 Transition Benefit
preserved 100% of the Rule of 85 for any employee who was 50 or older in July of 1995, with 90%
preserved for then 49 year old employees, etc. No benefit was preserved for employees then 40 or
younger.

You are eligible for the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit under the Special Separation Program, if you
would have reached the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit within two years of your Separation Date. In
other words, this enhancement applies if on your Separation Date the sum of your age and Credited
Service is at least 81.

For example, assume a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee was born June 30, 1948. On July 1,
1995, this employee was 47, so 70% of her Rule of 85 Transition benefit was preserved. Assume
further that her Separation Date is December 31, 2005 and that she then has exactly 26 years of
Credited Service.

5

 

If her employment had continued, she would have been entitled to the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit
as of October 1, 2006 (her age and service as of that date would have equaled 85). Therefore, this
employee would receive the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit (i.e., 70% of the Rule of 85 Transition
Benefit) when her benefits from the Retirement Plan begin, because October 1, 2006, is less than
two years from her Separation Date of December 31, 2005.

On the other hand, assume instead that a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee’s age and Credited
Service as of his Separation Date add up to less than 81. He is not eligible for the Rule of 85
Transition Benefit under the Special Separation Program because he would not have been entitled to
the Rule of 85 Transition Benefit within two years of his Separation Date.

The special provisions in the Retirement Plan are subject to certain discrimination tests under tax
laws. Our actuaries have reviewed data on a preliminary basis and concluded that these special
provisions satisfy those tests, under most scenarios. However, if the provisions in practice
happen to fail the tests, the benefits described here will be made, to the extent necessary, from
Company assets outside the Retirement Plan. Benefits from the Retirement Plan have tax advantages
that payments outside it do not. You will be notified as soon as possible if this provision
affects you.

Split Election. Separated Retirement Eligible Employees whose pension benefits are payable in part
from the Supplemental Retirement Plan who wish to make an election with respect to their retirement
plan benefits from that plan may do so in accordance with procedures established to satisfy the
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004. You must contact the HR Service Center at 1-866-MRK-HR4U
(1-866-675-4748) to request the appropriate paperwork if you are eligible.

Medical (including Prescription Drug) and Dental

If You Are Eligible For Retiree Healthcare Benefits under the Current Terms of the Merck Medical
and Dental Plans

If, as of your Separation Date, you are eligible for retiree healthcare (medical and dental)
benefits under the terms of Merck’s medical and dental plans, whether you sign the Separation
Letter or not, you will be eligible to select retiree healthcare coverage under Merck’s plans (as
they may be amended from time to time) as of the first day of the month after your Separation Date
(even if your Separation Date is not the first day of a month). Your active employee coverage will
continue to the end of the month in which your Separation Date occurs. Your retiree healthcare
benefits will commence as of the first of the month following your Separation Date (“Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date”).

You will be automatically enrolled in retiree dental under the comprehensive coverage option and in
retiree medical coverage under the same coverage option

6

 

in which you were enrolled as an active employee on the day before your Retiree Healthcare
Commencement Date, provided that coverage option is available to you as a retiree; if that medical
coverage option is not available, you will be automatically enrolled in the plan’s default option
(currently the Merck PPO option if your address is within the network coverage area, otherwise the
Merck 80/20 Out of Area option). Coverage under your retiree medical and dental coverage will also
automatically continue for your eligible dependents who were your covered dependents under the
applicable plans on the day before your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date.

You are permitted to add eligible dependents or drop covered dependents and/or change medical
coverage options retroactive to the date your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date only if you
notify the Merck Benefits Service Center of such change(s) within 30 days after your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date. Thereafter, any permitted changes will only be made prospectively.

Note that only those eligible dependents who are your “Dependents of Record” as of your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date can be eligible for dependent coverage under your retiree healthcare
coverage. Be sure to register your eligible dependents as “Dependents of Record” with the Merck
Benefit Service Center within 30 days after your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date. If an
eligible dependent is not timely registered as your “Dependent of Record”, he/she will never be
eligible for dependent coverage under your Merck retiree healthcare coverage. Eligible dependents
who are your covered dependents on your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, are automatically
registered as Dependents of Record.

Beginning in 2008 you can “opt-out” of retiree coverage, but note that your ability to re-enroll
for coverage is generally limited to annual open enrollment (with the following January 1 as the
re-enrollment effective date); mid-year enrollment is available only if you are covered under and
lose other coverage and you contact the Merck Benefit Service Center to re-enroll in Merck retiree
coverage within 30 days of the loss of your other coverage.

You must pay the applicable premiums for retiree healthcare coverage beginning on your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date. You will receive an invoice from Fidelity that indicates the premium
due for your retiree coverage. Prior to 2008, if you fail to pay the premium required for retiree
healthcare coverage in the time and manner specified on the invoice, your coverage will be
terminated and it will not be reinstated. Beginning in 2008, if you fail to timely pay the
required premium, you will be deemed to have opted out of coverage and your ability to re-enroll is
limited as described above. But note, if you want the flexibility to opt-out of Merck retiree
coverage starting in 2008, you must pay the required premiums for coverage through 2007.

7

 

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Separated Retirement
Employee whose Separation Date is prior to January 1, 2008 (or who is notified prior to January 1,
2008 that his/her Separation Date will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records as of his/her Separation Date; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule
applicable to the “Rule of 92” in effect on his/her Retiree Healthcare Commencement
Date, as the premium schedule may be amended from time to time.

For the “Rule of 92” premium schedule, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Separated Retirement
Eligible Employee whose Separation Date is on or after January 1, 2008 (other than a Separated
Retirement Eligible Employee who is notified prior to January 1, 2008 that his/her Separation Date
will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records (from age 40 for those subject to the
“Rule of 88”; all adjusted service for those subject to the “Rule of 92”) as of
his/her Separation Date; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule for
the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88”, as applicable, in effect on his/her Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date, as the premium schedule may be amended from time to
time.

To determine whether the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88” applies to you and to see the
premiums applicable to those schedules, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

8

 

You are eligible for retiree healthcare benefits if, as of your Separation Date, you are at least
age 55 and:

	 	•	 	have at least 10 years of service with the Company after age 40; or
	 
	 	•	 	(i) were an employee of the Company on January 1, 2003, (ii) have not had a break in
service since January 1, 2003, and (iii) have at least 10 years of Credited Service (as
defined in the Retirement Plan); or
	 
	 	•	 	(i) had a break in service with the Company after age 45 and before April 1, 2002, (ii)
had returned to work before April 1, 2002 and were employed on that date, (iii) have not
had a break in service since April 1, 2002, and (iv) have 10 years of Credited Service (as
defined in the Retirement Plan).

If You Are Not Eligible For Retiree Healthcare Benefits

If You Are Not Eligible For Retiree Healthcare Benefits — If You Do Not Sign the Separation Letter

If you are not eligible for retiree healthcare benefits and do not sign the Separation Letter, your
medical and dental coverage options in effect on your Separation Date will continue under the
normal provisions of Merck’s medical and dental plans (as they may be amended from time to time)
until the end of the month following the calendar month in which your Separation Date occurred. At
the end of that period, you will be eligible to elect to continue your coverage in accordance with
COBRA for up to 18 months from your Separation Date. If you have no medical and/or dental coverage
under Merck’s medical and dental plans on your Separation Date, you will not have medical and/or
dental coverage, as applicable, after your Separation Date nor will you be eligible to elect such
coverage under COBRA.

Special Separation Program – If You Are Not Eligible For Retiree Healthcare Benefits and Have at
Least 9 Years of Credited Service — If You Sign the Separation Letter

If, on your Separation Date, you (i) are at least age 55 and, (ii) have at least 9 years of
Credited Service (as defined in the Retirement Plan), (iii) are not eligible for retiree healthcare
benefits (see the section “If You Are Eligible for Retiree Healthcare Benefits under the Current
Terms of Merck’s Medical and Dental Plans,” above), and (iv) sign the Separation Letter, then,
under the Special Separation Program, you will be eligible to select retiree healthcare coverage
under Merck’s plans (as they may be amended from time to time) as of the first day of the month
after your Separation Date (even if your Separation Date is not the first day of a month). Your
active employee coverage will continue to the end of the month in which your Separation Date
occurs. Your retiree healthcare benefits will commence as of the first of the month following your
Separation Date (“Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date”).

9

 

You will be automatically enrolled in retiree dental under the comprehensive coverage option and in
retiree medical coverage under the same coverage option in which you were enrolled as an active
employee on the day before your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, provided that coverage option
is available to you as a retiree; if that medical coverage option is not available, you will be
automatically enrolled in the plan’s default option (currently the Merck PPO option if your address
is within the network coverage area, otherwise the Merck 80/20 Out of Area option). Coverage under
your retiree medical and dental coverage will also automatically continue for your eligible
dependents who were your covered dependents under the applicable plans on the day before your
Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date.

You are permitted to add eligible dependents or drop covered dependents and/or change medical
coverage options retroactive to the date your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date only if you
notify the Merck Benefits Service Center of such change(s) within 30 days after your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date. Thereafter, any permitted changes will only be made prospectively.

Note that only those eligible dependents who are your “Dependents of Record” as of your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date can be eligible for dependent coverage under your retiree healthcare
coverage. Be sure to register your eligible dependents as “Dependents of Record” with the Merck
Benefit Service Center within 30 days after your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date. If an
eligible dependent is not timely registered as your “Dependent of Record”, he/she will never be
eligible for dependent coverage under your Merck retiree healthcare coverage. Eligible dependents
who are your covered dependents on your Retiree Healthcare Commencement Date, are automatically
registered as Dependents of Record.

Beginning in 2008 you can “opt-out” of retiree coverage, but note that your ability to re-enroll
for coverage is generally limited to annual open enrollment (with the following January 1 as the
re-enrollment effective date); mid-year enrollment is available only if you are covered under and
lose other coverage and you contact the Merck Benefit Service Center to re-enroll in Merck retiree
coverage within 30 days of the loss of your other coverage.

You must pay the applicable premiums for retiree healthcare coverage beginning on your Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date. You will receive an invoice from Fidelity that indicates the premium
due for your retiree coverage. Prior to 2008, if you fail to pay the premium required for retiree
healthcare coverage in the time and manner specified by on the invoice, your coverage will be
terminated and it will not be reinstated. Beginning in 2008, if you fail to timely pay the
required premium, you will be deemed to have opted out of coverage and your ability to re-enroll is
limited as described above. But note, if you want the

10

 

flexibility to opt-out of Merck retiree coverage starting in 2008, you must pay the required
premiums for coverage through 2007.

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Separated Retirement
Employee whose Separation Date is prior to January 1, 2008 (or who is notified prior to January 1,
2008 that his/her Separation Date will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records as of his/her Separation Date; provided,
however, that if such sum is less than 65, then the Separated Retirement Eligible
Employee is deemed to have 65 points; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule
applicable to the “Rule of 92” in effect on his/her Retiree Healthcare Commencement
Date, as the premium schedule may be amended from time to time..

For the “Rule of 92” premium schedule, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

For purposes of determining the retiree medical and dental premiums, a Separated Retirement
Eligible Employee whose Separation Date is on or after January 1, 2008 (other than a Separated
Retirement Eligible Employee who is notified prior to January 1, 2008 that his/her Separation Date
will occur on or after January 1, 2008)

	 	•	 	will have the number of points that is the sum of his/her age and years of adjusted
service as recorded on the Company’s records (from age 40 for those subject to the
“Rule of 88”; all adjusted service for those subject to the “Rule of 92”) as of
his/her Separation Date; provided, however, that if such sum is less than 65, then the
Separated Retirement Eligible Employee is deemed to have 65 points; and
	 
	 	•	 	will pay premiums for medical coverage in accordance with the premium schedule for
the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88”, as applicable, in effect on his/her Retiree
Healthcare Commencement Date, as the premium schedule may be amended from time to
time.

To determine whether the “Rule of 92” or the “Rule of 88” applies to you and to see the
premiums applicable to those schedules, see the Reference Library on Fidelity’s netbenefits
website.

Continuation of retiree medical and dental coverages under the Special Separation Program for
Separated Retirement Eligible Employees who are not otherwise eligible for retiree healthcare
benefits is subject to the same early forfeiture provisions applicable to separated employees as
described in the Separation Plan SPD. The forfeiture provisions will apply for the Separation Pay
Period only.

11

 

Special Separation Program – If You Are Not Eligible For Retiree Healthcare Benefits and Have Less
than 9 Years of Credited Service and You Sign the Separation Letter

If, on your Separation Date, you are (i) a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee who is not
otherwise eligible for retiree healthcare benefits under the terms of Merck’s medical and dental
plans, (ii) have less than nine years of Credited Service, and (iii) you sign the Separation
Letter, then, under the Special Separation Program, you will be eligible for continued medical and
dental coverage (not retiree coverage) under Merck’s medical and dental plans (as they may be
amended from time to time) for the Separation Pay Period as more fully described in the Separation
Plan SPD. If the Separation Pay Period is less than six months, you may continue medical and
dental coverage for six months. Contributions for medical and dental coverage will be deducted
from your Separation Pay. The contributions will be the same as the contributions for active
employees, as they may change from time to time. At the end of the Separation Pay Period or, if
the Separation Pay Period is less than 6 months, then at the end of the 6-month period during which
medical and dental coverages are provided, you may elect to continue your coverage in accordance
with COBRA for up to an additional 18 months. If you have no medical and/or dental coverage on
your Separation Date, you will not have such coverage during the Separation Pay Period (or the
6-month period, if applicable) nor will you be eligible to elect such coverage under COBRA.

Continuation of medical and dental coverages under the Special Separation Program for Separated
Retirement Eligible Employees who are not otherwise eligible for retiree healthcare benefits is
subject to the same early forfeiture provisions applicable to separated employees as described in
the Separation Plan SPD.

Life Insurance

Whether you sign the Separation Letter or not, you will be considered a retiree for life insurance
purposes under Merck’s Life Insurance Plan (as it may be amended from time to time) as of your
Separation Date, with retiree coverage to begin on the first day of the month after your Separation
Date. As a retiree, your employee group term life insurance coverage equal to 1x base pay (or 2x
base pay if you have “Old Format”) will continue at no cost to you. This amount will reduce by 25%
of the amount of your coverage starting on the first day of the month after your Separation Date,
and by an equal dollar amount on the anniversary of that date, until the third anniversary of that
date, when no balance remains. You have the right to convert the amount by which your insurance is
reduced to an individual policy. See the Life Insurance Plan section of the

12

 

current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification) for information on
conversion. If you are a retiree who is not yet age 65 on your Separation Date, you may continue
your employee group term life insurance in excess of 1x base pay (2x if you are “Old Format”),
dependent life and/or survivor income protection (collectively “Optional Coverages”) in effect on
your Separation Date until age 65 by paying the applicable premiums in the time and manner required
by Merck. If you fail to pay the premium required to continue your coverage in the time and manner
specified by Merck, your coverage(s) will be terminated and they will not be reinstated. If you
are age 65 or older on your Separation Date, your Optional Coverages will continue for 31 days from
your Separation Date. During this period you may convert these coverages to an individual policy.
See the Life Insurance Plan section of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of
material modification) for information on conversion.

In any event, your accidental death and dismemberment coverage ends on your Separation Date.

13

 

The chart below is provided for your convenience to compare the medical, dental and life insurance
benefits offered under the regular plan provisions and the Special Separation Program.

	 	 	 	 	 
	 	 	Regular Plan	 	Special Separation
	 	 	Provisions	 	Program
	 
	Medical, Dental, 

Prescription Drug

	 	If eligible for
retiree healthcare
benefits —you will
be treated as a
retiree w/ applicable
contributions 

If not eligible for
retiree healthcare
benefits — benefits
continue until the
end of the month
following the month
in which your
Separation Date
occurred; eligible
for COBRA afterward
	 	If eligible for
retiree healthcare
benefits – treated as
a retiree w/applicable
contributions paid by
retiree

If not eligible for
retiree healthcare
benefits – medical
and or dental
benefits continue for
the Separation Pay
Period (minimum 6
months) with
applicable
contributions
deducted from
Separation Pay;
eligible for COBRA
afterward
	 
	 	 	 	 
	Basic Employee Term
Life Insurance (new
format-maximum 1x
base pay; Old format
—2x base pay)

	 	Treated as a retiree
	 	Treated as a retiree
	 
	 	 	 	 
	Optional Employee 

Group Term Life, 

Dependent Life, 

Survivor Income

	 	Treated as a retiree
— You can continue
coverage at your cost
up to age 65
	 	Treated as a retiree
— You can continue
coverage at your cost
up to age 65
	 
	 	 	 	 
	AD&D

	 	No coverage
	 	No coverage

Annual Incentive Program/Executive Incentive Program (“AIP/EIP”)—

As described in more detail below, payment of bonuses, or a special payment in lieu of a bonus,
depends on when a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee’s Separation Date occurs during a
performance year. Actual AIP/EIP bonuses with respect to the performance year immediately
preceding the Separated Retirement Eligible Employee’s Separation Date may be paid to employees
whose employment terminates between January 1 and the time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for that year
to other employees. No AIP/EIP or special payment in lieu of a bonus with respect to the
performance year in which the Separation Date occurs is payable for any employee separated after
AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year and on or before June 30. A special payment in lieu of a bonus
is payable under this program with respect to the performance year in which the Separation Date
occurs only for employees whose Separation Dates occur on or after July 1 and on or before December
31 of that performance year.

14

 

If Your Separation Date occurs between January 1 and the time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year

If your Separation Date occurs on or after January 1 and the day AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other
Merck employees, you will be eligible for consideration for an AIP/EIP bonus with respect to the
prior complete performance year on the same terms and conditions as other Merck employees.
Provided you are in a class of employees eligible for an AIP/EIP, your AIP/EIP bonus, if any, will
be paid to you at the same time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other Merck employees or will be
deferred in accordance with your applicable deferral election for that AIP/EIP performance year.
Eligibility for consideration for AIP/EIP bonus is not contingent upon your signing the Separation
Letter. You will not be eligible for any AIP/EIP or payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP for the
performance year in which your Separation Date occurs.

If Your Separation Date occurs between the time AIP/EIP bonuses are paid for a year and June 30

If your Separation Date occurs after AIP/EIP bonuses are paid to other Merck employees and on or
before June 30, you will not be eligible for consideration for an AIP/EIP bonus or the special in
lieu of bonus payment described below whether or not you sign the Separation Letter.

If Your Separation Date occurs after June 30 and on or before December 31

A special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP with respect to the performance year in which your
Separation Date occurs may be paid only if you sign and do not revoke the Separation Letter. The
special payment, if any, will be calculated based on the bonus paid to you under the Annual
Incentive Program/Executive Incentive Program with respect to the prior complete performance year
and the number of months you worked in the current performance year and is subject to adjustment by
the Company in its sole discretion based on a variety of factors, including but not limited to your
documented poor or extraordinary performance in the current performance year. If you received no
AIP/EIP in the prior performance year and you do not have documented poor performance for the prior
or current performance year, the Company may base your special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus,
if any, on the minimum of the Company’s bonus range for your position. If your AIP/EIP for the
prior performance year was prorated (e.g., due to a leave of absence, new hire status,
promotion/demotion, change in full-time/part-time status, etc.), the Company may, in its
discretion, calculate your special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus, if any, by annualizing the
actual AIP/EIP paid for the prior performance year. If you receive a special payment in lieu of an
AIP/EIP bonus, it will be paid to you (less applicable withholding) as soon as administratively
feasible following your Separation Date.

15

 

Your deferral election applicable to the AIP/EIP for the current performance year if any, will not
apply to any special payment in lieu of an AIP/EIP bonus.

Merck On-Site Day Care Centers

If your child is enrolled in a Merck on-site day care center, the child can remain enrolled at the
center until the Separation Letter Return Date. If you sign the Separation Letter and your child
is in an infant, toddler or preschool room as of your Separation Date, he/she may continue at the
day care center until the third month anniversary of your Separation Date; a child in kindergarten
as of your Separation Date may continue until the end of the calendar week in which kindergarten
graduation occurs; provided that continued enrollment is subject to your continuing to abide by the
rules and regulations of the day care center and the terms of the Separation Letter. Continuation
for the first three months shall be at the regular tuition rate. For kindergarten children
continuing after the first three months, there may be an additional charge.

OTHER BENEFITS AND PROGRAMS

Stock Options, Restricted Stock Units and Performance Stock Units

Only employees may receive incentives under Merck’s incentive stock plans, including stock options,
restricted stock units (“RSUs”) or performance stock units (“PSUs”); therefore, you will not be
eligible to receive any grants after your Separation Date.

Outstanding Stock Options, RSUs and PSUs

Under Merck’s incentive stock plans, stock options, RSUs and PSUs held by a U.S. employee whose
employment ends are treated under the provisions of the grants applicable to retirement only if the
employee is considered a retiree under the Retirement Plan.

Whether you sign the Separation Letter or not, because you are considered a retiree under the
Retirement Plan the retirement provisions applicable to stock options, restricted stock units and
performance stock units will apply to any outstanding incentive you hold on your Separation Date.
The retirement provisions may differ based on the grants. IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILTY TO FAMILIARIZE
YOURSELF WITH THE TERMS OF INDIVIDUAL GRANTS.

Retirement Provisions

Stock Options

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made prior to 2001, the retirement
provisions are:

16

 

Vested options: May be exercised until the earlier of (i) the day before the 5th
anniversary of your Separation Date (considered your “retirement date”) or (ii) the
original expiration date.

Generally, for annual and quarterly stock option grants made during 2001 and thereafter, the
retirement provisions are:

Unvested options will vest on the original vesting date and then be exercisable for the
full term of the option, expiring on the original expiration date.

Key R&D, MRL and MMD new hire stock option grants, and other stock option grants may have different
terms. See the term sheets applicable to such stock option grants.

If you are treated as retired, and later rehired, stock options that are unexercised and
outstanding on your rehire date will continue under the retirement terms.

RSUs

Under the retirement provisions of the RSUs, your annual grants of restricted stock units, if any,
generally will vest and become distributable as if your employment with Merck had continued. See
the term sheets applicable to RSUs granted to you, if any.

PSUs

Under the retirement provisions of the PSUs, a pro rata portion of your annual grant of performance
share units that were granted to you at least 6 months prior to your Separation Date, if any, will
be payable when the distribution, if any, with respect to the applicable performance year is made
to active employees. Performance share units, if any, granted to you within 6 months of your
Separation Date will lapse on your Separation Date. See the term sheets applicable to PSUs granted
to you, if any.

If you have any question about your stock options, restricted stock units or performance stock
units, you can call the HR Service Center at 1-866-MRK-HR4U (1-866-675-4748).

* * *

The following describes the terms and conditions of certain Merck benefit plans and programs as
they apply to employees whose employment with Merck

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terminates for any reason. For additional information, see the applicable sections of the current
Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification).

Dependent Care Reimbursement Account

Your participation in the Dependent Care Reimbursement Account (“DCRA”) ends on your Separation
Date. Eligible expenses incurred throughout the calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs
(even after Merck employment ends) can be reimbursed but only up to the amount actually contributed
to the account. Claims for those expenses must be submitted to Aetna by April 15th of
the year following the year in which your Separation Date occurs. Amounts remaining in the account
after all eligible expenses have been paid will be forfeited.

Financial Engines

Your eligibility to use the Financial Engines financial planning tool will end on your Separation
Date.

Financial Planning

If you elected Financial Planning, you will continue in this benefit through the remainder of the
calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs. Your remaining cost for this benefit will be
deducted from your final pay check, or, if necessary, from any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation
Pay paid pursuant to the Separation Benefits Plan. Your Financial Planning election is irrevocable
and cannot be changed.

Flexible Benefits Program

The Flexible Benefits Program consists of the following Merck plans and programs: medical, dental,
vision, health care and dependent care reimbursement accounts, financial planning, life insurance
(including basic and optional term life, dependent term life, survivor income and accidental death
and dismemberment), long term care and long term disability. Your participation in these plans
ends as described elsewhere in this communication. However, a full month of contribution/premium
for your coverage under these plans in effect on your Separation Date may be deducted from your
paycheck for the month in which your Separation Date occurs.

Health Care Reimbursement Account

Your participation in the Health Care Reimbursement Account (“HCRA”) ends on your Separation Date,
unless you elect to continue to participate in accordance with COBRA for the remainder of the
calendar year in which your Separation

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Date occurs. If you elect to continue participation in HCRA under COBRA, you must make your
required contributions on an after-tax basis. Eligible expenses incurred while you participate in
HCRA during the calendar year in which your Separation Date occurs can be reimbursed up to your
entire elected amount. Claims incurred after your participation in HCRA ends cannot be reimbursed,
no matter how much money is left in the account. Claims for expenses incurred during the calendar
year in which your Separation Date occurs and while you are a participant in HCRA must be submitted
to Aetna by April 15 of the year following the year in which your Separation Date occurs. Amounts
remaining in the account after all eligible expenses have been paid will be forfeited.

Long Term Care

If you elected coverage under Merck’s Long Term Care Plan for you (or your spouse or domestic
partner), that coverage will end on your Separation Date. However, if you want to continue
coverage without interruption, you must contact CNA (the insurer) and pay your first quarterly
premium to CNA within 31 days after the last day of the month in which your Separation Date occurs.
For more information (and to request the necessary forms) contact CNA directly at 1-800-528-4582.

Long Term Disability

Your participation in the Long Term Disability Plan will end on the last day of the month in which
your Separation Date occurs. In other words, you must have satisfied the 26-week eligibility
period and filed an application for benefits by the end of the month that includes your Separation
Date to be eligible for LTD benefits. If you are disabled and receiving income replacement
benefits under the Long Term Disability Plan on your Separation Date, those benefits will continue
in accordance with the terms of the Long Term Disability Plan. However, Pay in Lieu of Notice and
Separation Pay paid by the Company under the Special Separation Program will act as an offset from
benefits payable under the Long Term Disability Plan (meaning the LTD benefits will be reduced by
the Pay in Lieu of Notice and Separation Pay.)

Savings Plan

Any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay you receive under the Special Separation Program is not
Base Pay and may not be contributed to the Savings Plan. A pro-rata deduction will be made to the
Savings Plan based on the percentage of your monthly base pay you receive for the month in which
your Separation Date occurs. If you have a plan loan and do not repay it within 45 days of your
Separation Date, the loan will be declared in default and reported as a taxable distribution to the
Internal Revenue Service.

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You generally may receive a final distribution from the Savings Plan at any time after your
Separation Date. However, if your account balance is $5,000 or less, your account balance
automatically will be distributed to you soon after your Separation Date. If, upon reaching age
65, you have not previously elected to receive your benefits, your account balance will be
distributed to you without regard to its amount. Review the information in the Salaried Savings
Plan section of the current Merck Benefits Book (and applicable summaries of material modification)
for additional information on Receiving a Final Distribution.

Short Term Disability

Subject to applicable state law, your participation in the Short Term Disability Plan ends on your
Separation Date. If you are disabled and are receiving income replacement benefits under the Short
Term Disability Plan on your Separation Date, those benefits will continue in accordance with the
terms of the plan. However, subject to state law, Pay in Lieu of Notice and Separation Pay paid by
the Company under the Special Separation Program will act as an offset from benefits payable under
the Short Term Disability Plan (meaning the STD benefits will be reduced by the Pay in Lieu of
Notice and Separation Pay). Where state law does not permit such offsets to be made to STD
benefits, STD benefits will instead act as an offset from Pay in Lieu of Notice and/or Separation
Pay paid (or payable) by the Company under the Special Separation Program (meaning Pay in Lieu of
Notice and/or Separation Pay will be reduced by the STD benefits).

Travel Accident

Your coverage under the Travel Accident Insurance Plan ends on your Separation Date.

Vacation Pay

You will be paid for any amount of vacation that you have accrued but not used as of your
Separation Date. Conversely, you must reimburse Merck for any vacation you used prior to your
Separation Date that you had not earned as of your Separation Date. Any such amounts to be
reimbursed may be deducted from any Pay in Lieu of Notice or Separation Pay paid pursuant to the
Separation Benefits Plan.

Vision

Coverage under the Vision Plan ends on the last day of the month in which your Separation Date
occurs. You will be given the opportunity to continue this benefit in accordance with COBRA for up
to 18 months from your Separation Date by paying the required premiums.

* * *

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The Special Separation Program described here currently is scheduled to be in effect for
Separations From Service that occur from November 1, 2005 through December 31, 2008. Merck retains
the right (to the extent permitted by law) to amend or terminate the Special Separation Program and
any benefit or plan described in this brochure (or otherwise) at any time. However, following a
change in control of Merck (as defined in the Change in Control Separation Benefits Plan), certain
limitations apply to Merck’s ability to amend or terminate this and other benefit plans. In
addition, an employee whose employment is terminated without cause within two years following a
change in control will also be entitled to receive the retirement bridge as provided in the Change
in Control Separation Benefits Plan.

While it has no current intention to do so, Merck also may extend, decrease or enhance, the Special
Separation Program in the future. If you sign and return the Separation Letter by the Separation
Letter Return Date, any later amendment or termination will not decrease or increase the amount of
Separation Pay you are eligible to receive under the Special Separation Program.

Notwithstanding anything in the Special Separation Program to the contrary, benefits under the
Program that are subject to Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, will be
adjusted to avoid the excise tax under Section 409A. Merck will take any and all steps it
determines are necessary, in its sole and absolute discretion, to adjust benefits under the Special
Separation Program to avoid the excise tax under Section 409A, including but not limited to,
reducing or eliminating benefits, changing the time or form of payment of benefits, etc.

Payments generally may not be made on account of separation from service for six months following
the termination of employment of a “Specified Employee” as defined in Prop. Treas. Reg. Sec.
1.409A-1(i) or any successor thereto, which in general includes the top 50 employees of a company
ranked by compensation. Notwithstanding anything contained in the Special Separation Program to
the contrary, if a Covered Employee is a “Specified Employee” on his or her Separation Date, to the
extent required by Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, no payments will
be made to him or her prior to the first day of the sixth month following termination of
employment. Instead, amounts that would otherwise have been payable will be accumulated and paid,
without interest, as soon as administratively feasible following such six-month period.

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Glossary of Definitions

As used in this document, the following terms have the following meanings.

“Company” or “Merck” means Merck & Co., Inc.

“Credited Service” is as defined in the Retirement Plan.

“Retirement Plan” means the Retirement Plan for Salaried Employees of Merck & Co., Inc.

“Separation Benefits Plan” means the Merck & Co., Inc. Separation Benefits Plan for Nonunion
Employees

“Separated Retirement Eligible Employees” are certain nonunionized Merck &
Co., Inc. employees

(1) who experience a Separation From Service ( as defined in the Separation Benefits Plan);
and

(2) who as of their last day of active employment with Merck (the “Separation Date”) are

	 	•	 	at least age 55 and have at least 10 years of Credited Service (as defined in
the Retirement Plan) or
	 
	 	•	 	at least age 65.

Separated Retirement Eligible Employees are only those employees who are designated by Merck as
“Separated Retirement Eligible Employees.” “Separated Retirement Eligible Employees” do not
include employees who terminate employment in any way that does not constitute a Separation From
Service (as defined in Separation Benefits Plan) as determined by Merck, including employees who
resign for any reason.

“Separation Date” means a Separated Retirement Eligible Employee’s last day of employment with
Merck.

“Separation Letter” means the Company-provided letter that will describe the Special Separation
Program benefits and include a release of claims against the Company and may include such other
terms such as non-solicitation and non-competition provisions, as the Company determines.

“Separation Letter Return Date” is the date stated in the Separation Letter by which Separated
Retirement Eligible Employees must sign and return it to the Company.

“Separation Pay Period” is the number of full or partial workweeks for which a Separated Retirement
Eligible Employee is being paid Separation Pay.

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“Special Separation Program” means the separation benefits that Separated Retirement Eligible
Employees receive if they sign and do not revoke the Separation Letter.

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